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A57358 The practice of physick in seventeen several books wherein is plainly set forth the nature, cause, differences, and several sorts of signs : together with the cure of all diseases in the body of man / by Nicholas Culpeper ... Abdiah Cole ... and William Rowland ; being chiefly a translation of the works of that learned and renowned doctor, Lazarus Riverius ...; Praxis medica. English. 1655 Rivière, Lazare, 1589-1655.; Culpeper, Nicholas, 1616-1654.; Cole, Abdiah, ca. 1610-ca. 1670.; Rowland, William. 1655 (1655) Wing R1559; ESTC R31176 898,409 596

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the Caul or the Pancrea or other Parts or also somtimes when the Child or After-birth are corrupted in the Womb. And hence not only slow Feavers but somtimes also acute ones do arise according to the different Nature of the putrefactions And finally to this kind of slow Feavers those are to be referred which are found in Cachectical persons and in Maids which have the Green-Sickness which Fernelius conceives do arise from a light putrefaction of wheyish flegm shed abroad in the Body Besides these forenamed differences of continual Feavers which are most frequent and are commonly set down by Authors there are also some other arising from peculiar and extraordinary Causes which somtimes we meet with in our Practice The Case of a certain Infant may serve for example propounded by Zechius in his 46. Counsel The Infant was scarce two yeares old and had a continual Feaver with most greivous Symptomes viz. Unquietness convulsions and continual stomach Sickness enclining to Vomit and it was conjectured that there was some Malignity adjoyned because such greivous symptomes did not answer to that Feaver For al the external Parts were cold though the inner Parts were burned with heat as appeared by the heat about the brest and under the short Ribs and also from the dryness and blackness of the Tongue The Cause of which was blood putrifying conteined in the stomach For this Infant being tongue-tied was lately cut by a Chirurgion in which work some Veins or other was opened which shed some blood into the stomach which putrefying there by sending forth hot putrid and as it were poisonous Vapors into the heart and Brain was the Cause of al the symptomes aforesaid But how this cause was found out and removed it is worth the while here to recite out of the Story of Zechius So often quoth he as I diligently consider with my self how hard a thing it is to understand internal Diseases and thier causes I come easily to be of the mind that Hippocrates in his second Book of vulgar Diseases Sect. 4. did not without greatest premeditation leave in writing then in the Curing of all hidden Diseases the Physitian must diligently enquire the first assault of the Disease that is to say the first occasion of the Patients illness For of that for the most part depends the knowledg both of the Cause and Cure See an Example hereof This Disease of the Gentlemans Child was very acute and the Cause very hard to find had not I diligently asked of the Parents touching the conditions of the Child and the Nurse who told me that two daies before its being first ill a certain Chyrurgeon had cut the Membrane whereby the Tongue of it was fastened to the parts beneath it And when I again asked them if presently after this was done they had caused the Child to be held forward or if any blood had come out of its mouth they said no it was neither so held neither came any blood from the mouth of it Whereupon I presently conjectured that blood was fallen from the place cut into the Stomach and there putresied and was the cause of the Disease and symptomes aforesaid Neither did my Opinion deceive me for having given it Oyl of sweet Almonds to make it vomit it uttered a considerable quantity of clotted blood and matterish Also it voided with a Clyster many clodders of blood And presently by the blessing of God Almighty the Feaver was abated and all Symptomes began to cease Whereupon it fell greedily and lustily on sucking its Nurse and all the following night it slept quietly and was afterward perfectly well The Diagnostick Signs of putrid continual Feavers do some of them shew the continu'ty others the putrefaction and the rest the peculiar differences of them The continuity is easily known in that the Feavers is continual and hath no intermision The putrefaction is signified by a sharper heat than ordinary and more biting and by a sharp and biting Sooty vapor produced by the exhalation of putrid Humors The pulse is not only great and frequent and oftentimes unequal but it hath this peculiar property That the Systole is quicker than the Diastole because the Expulsion of Sooty Excrements is more necessary than refrigeration The Urins are in the beginning crude or very little digested The Exacerbations or fits keep their certain times which yet is not to be understood of the Feaver Synochus A cold shaking fit at the beginning of the Disease Hereunto are added various Symptomes commonly accompanying putrid Feavers as Ilness of stomach vomiting heaviness of the body pain of the head raving giddiness of the head hiccoughs anxiety heart-burning thirst roughness and blackness of the tongue stretching of the parts under the short ribs and the rest Before which preceded weariness without labor pursiness troubled sleeps watchings tension of the parts under the short ribs difficult breathing pain and pulsation of the head stomach-sickness want of Appetite plenty of stinking Excrements frequent yawnings and reachings or some of these But the peculiar Differences of continual putrid Feavers may be discerned by these Signs following A continual putrid Feaver called Synochus putrida hath the same signs which were propounded in Synocha simplici but more vehement for the heat is more sharp the watchings head-ach thirst disquiet and other Symptomes are more vehement also the pulse is unequal so that the Systole appears greater than the Diastole the Urines are crude red and thick The Signs of a Feaver from Choller are burning pain a pulse mighty frequent and swift a sharp Urine fiery in the beginning alwaies crude without Sediment Stomach-sickness Chollerick vomitings and Stools Chollerick much anxiety mighty thirst bitterness of the mouth driness and blackness of the tongue watchings raving and an ulcerous kind of weariness soregoing paleness of Face or a citrine Color youthful Age temperature hot and dry Summer season hot and dry Diet Chollerick Evacuations suppressed And a continual Tertian is distinguished from a Synochus biliosa or continent Feaver springing of Choller because it hath Exacerbations or fits every third day but the Synochus biliosa keeps stil one and the same tenor The Signs of a continual Quotidian are Heat at first rather vaporous than biting afterwards somwhat sharp but unequal because of the thickness of the Humor which is difficultly dissolved the Urines are at first white watry troubled afterward somwhat red and thick the Pulse is seldomer slower and less than in the rest of these Feavers thirst little or none seldom sweat unless there be salt flegm the Face of the Patient is somwhat bloat or blown up lax flaggy and as it were Lead colored Drowziness want of Appetite flegmatick Excretions a cold and moist Temperament old Age Winter Season Cold and Moist Diet Evacuations suppressed and a dayly Excretion of the Disease A continual Quartan is known by these Signs The Heat is less sharp than in Feavers of Choller yet sharper than in Feavers of Flegm likewise
of the Eyes such as are prescribed in Gutta serena to which you may ad a washing of the Eyes which must be done every day thus In the morning first chew sweet Fennel seeds some space of time then fill the mouth with Wine and after it is warm in the mouth wash the Eyes therewith till they begin to smart which wil cease when you leave washing Moreover Spectacles are very good to preserve sight which do make the Objects neither bigger nor less than they naturally are And it is profitable to refresh the sight with green or sky coloured Spectales And Lastly You must avoid al things which hurt the sight and use those things which help it as is declared in the Diet for the Cure of Gutta serena CHAP. V. Of the Enlarging or Dilatation of the Pupilla THe Tunicle called Vvea out of Galen 1. de sympt caus cap. 2. is obnoxious to divers diseases and especially to Ruption Distortion Dilatation and Constriction A Ruption may come both of an external Cause as stroak or contusion and of an inward when much humor distendeth and breaketh the Tunicle But this being incurable concerneth not us A Distortion of the Vvea cannot be but in the first constitution of it because it adhaereth to the Cornea Therefore Galen in the place quoted doth only reckon it among the different symptomes of the Vvea and doth not stand to explain it because it is of no concernment in the practice of Physick We therefore omitting the first two differences wil only insist upon the explaining of the Dilatation and constriction of the Pupilla The Dilatation of the Pupilla which is a hole in the Uvea Tunicle by which the Species of Objects pass into the Eye is called in Greek Mydryasis this hurts the sight because too much light goeth into the Eye hence it is that they which have this disease see better in a darkish place than in a light Which appears by Natural and ordinary change in the Pupilla in bright and obscure places for when the Sight is exercised in a cleer light place the Pupilla is contracted that the light may go less into the Eye and not hurt it with too much by dissipating and dispersing the Spirits and hence it is that they which go out of a very light place into a dark see almost nothing at their first entry because the Pupilla being formerly contracted doth not in an obscure place receive light enough to make a perfect Sight After when they have continued a while in an obscure place the Pupilla is by degrees dilated to receive more light for the cleering of Sight and then those things which at first entrance were not seen are cleerly perceived On the contrary they which go out of a dark into a very light place cannot at first endure the light and their Eyes are much dazled because the Pupilla being much dilated before in the dark place for to get light enough into the Eye when it comes suddenly thus enlarged into a great light too much light gets into the Eye and so makes it dazle and disturbs the Sight Whence it appears that light necessary to sight ought to pass into the Eye in a moderate quantity and for the receiving thereof it is necessary that the Pupilla be moderately large Now the Preternatural Dilation of the Pupilla is either in the first original which is not to be tampered with or comes of Preternatural causes which are internal or external The nearest and immediate of the internal causes is the stretching of the Vvea which comes either of driness or repletion Driness doth stretch the Vvea and makes the form of the Pupilla larger as when leather pierced through when it is dried hath the hole larger And this dry distemper comes from long watching Feavers and other drying causes The repletion of the Vvea when it distendeth it on every side makes the Pupilla larger and this is produced either of vapors and wind sent into the Eye or of humors flowing thither or from the extraordinary encrease of the watery humor of the Eye or lastly from the swelling of the Tunicle Uvea it self To these Causes we may ad the Convulsion of the Uvea which appeareth chiefly in Epileptical fits for then all the Nervous and Membranous parts are distended and so is also the Uvea and this appears chiefly most manifest in Epileptick Children in whom the dilation of the Pupilla is so great that it is over all the Circle called Iris and therefore the sight is abolished The internal Causes are a stroak or a fall or a retention of the Spirits as in Women in Child-birth and Trumpeters A stroak or fall make a defluxion to the Eyes hence comes extending of the Pupilla retention of Spirits makes wind and humors from whence comes distention The knowledg of this Disease is not difficult because it may be seen with your Eyes especially if the Physitian knew before it became infirm how large naturally the Pupilla was as also if there be a hinderance of the sight by reason of the over largeness of it Moreover The natural largeness of the Pupilla is known by this If when you shut one Eye the Pupilla of the other is larger which will not be in a Preternatural dilatation because then the Uvea cannot be further extended Lastly If this dil●aation of the Pupilla be only in one Eye it is Preternatural and signifieth one Eye only is affected As to the Prognostick The Dilatation of the Pupilla from the original so is incurable but that which cometh after is hardly cured especially that which comes of driness but that which comes of other ●inuance is curable because yong diseases of the Eyes according to Galens Doctrine may be cured out old may not but with very much difficulty be cured The Cure is to be varied according to the variety of the Cause and if it come from driness which can scarce come from an internal cause but also the whol Body must be so afflicted therefore we must refresh the whol body with moist Remedies and nourishments and such as are restaurative such we use in Hectick Feavers but more peculiarly the Body is to be moistened with a bath of warm water and new milk which also must be often put into the Eyes especially womans Milk If it comes from a humor which filleth the Eye because it floweth from the Head you must purge the Head and the whol Body also and then you must discuss the humor that is fixed in the Eye Which when they may be sufficiently performed by the Remedies propounded for the cure of a Cataract or Suffusion we shall not in vain repeat them here but send you to the asoresaid Trearite for them where you shall find all things necessary for the discussing and dissipating humors contained in the Eyes Yet you may after use some astringents which may make the Pupilla which is too much enlarged more narrow for this end you may
Julep of Violets to cool him thus Take of the pouder of Sows prepared one scruple Aqua vitae two scruples red Pease Broth eight ounces Mix them and give it six hours before meat Thus Augenius Sennertus in his Chapter of the Stone in the Bladder tels a famous story of William Lauremberg Professor of Rostoch who being old and troubled with the stone was unwilling to be cut and therfore sought for other Remedies First he tried the famous Water against the Stone which is so much prized by Princes which is thus made Take of Salt of white Tartar one ounce Parsley Water one pint Mix them and strain them with a brown Paper and with Orange peels make it yellow He used also the Indian Jewel called in Spanish Igiada which is most famous for breaking the Stone but both to no purpose Therfore be desired to make tryal of the Medicine of Sows which Horatius Augenius saith cured two yong men In imitation of whom after general Physick and good Diet he took of Sows one scruple the Spirit of Juniper two scruples red Pease Broth ten ounces which he took in the morning but the first and second time he found a straightness in his Breast and a fainting so that he was constrained to take one dram of Treacle with the Potion and so used it fifteen daies but all this while he voided no gravel And then he added other things and made it thus Take of prepared Sows two ounces a Hares and Goats Blood prepared wild Rose Flowers and purple Violet seeds of each one ounce Species Lithontribi two scruples mix them for an Antidote of which take two scruples the Diuretick Decoction ten ounces the Spirit of Juniper two scruples Which Medicine after he had taken it the second time at five a clock in the morning four hours after he felt a great pain under the Os Publis about the Neck of the Bladder A little after he made a little Water and therewith some thin red things like scales of fishes which though they seemed to be slimy yet when they were touched turned to sand So that it plainly appeared that they were the outside of the Stone By the continuance of this Medicine every fourth or fifth day he voided the like scales and somtimes bigger pieces especially when he used a sweet bath But when the neck of the bladder was wounded by the fragments and the stone he used Medicines to asswage pain and by the use of these Medicines was in seventeen months cured The Decoction was Take of Liquoris four scruples Roots of Marsh-mallows Couch-grass Rest-harrow of each half an ounce Winter Cherries twenty red Pease six ounces Raisons one ounce the four great cold Seeds of each one scruple Barley two handfuls Boyl them in Winter Cherry Water Rest-harrow Strawberry and Bean Flower Water of each one pint and an half to the straining add of the Syrup of Marsh-mallows four ounces The Sows are thus prepared Take of live Sows two pound wash them in Rest-harrow Water then drown them in Spanish Wine then powr the Wine out and put them in Glasses the more Glasses the better because then they will dry better Put these Glasses well stopt into the Oven when the Bread is drawn that they may dry gently till they will pouder then put some Spanish Wine upon this Pouder as much as it will take in and dry it again do so thrice and fourthly wash it with this Liquor Take of Straw-berry Water three ounces Spirit of Vitriol half a dram mix them Then dry it and make it fine and keep it in a Glass for your use Besides the aforesaid the use of the distilled Water of Goats blood or of the Urin of a Goat newly slain which was formerly mentioned in the Stone of the Kidneys If the Stone cannot be broken with Medicines necessity requireth the manual operation though it be dangerous lest the Patient die with lingering pain This requires a skilful and wel exercised Artist and that it may have good success as we have observed It is the Duty of the Physitian before the operation to prepare the body by bleeding purging and diet as the state of the business requireth And observe that the taking away of a stone from a Woman hath no danger because it is done only by enlarging the Passage of the Urine which in them is very short If the Patient fear cutting or want a good Chyrurgion he may use asswaging Medicines least the Stone should cut and ulcerate the neck of the bladder such as are prescribed for heat of Urine But if a stone fastened in the neck of the bladder stop the Urine it must be shaken back with lying upon the back with the leg up and the body shaked and then by a good somentation or bath and with a Catheter let the stone be sent back into the bladder Chap. 3. Of the Inflamation of the Reins and Bladder BEcause the Inflamation of the Reins and Bladder are cured with the same Medicines therefore we will put them in the same Chapter although the Signs are different as shall be shewed This Inflamation is a Tumor of those Parts from the flowing of Blood or Choller unto them This is not very ordinary because the substance of those parts is solid and thick but somtimes it happeneth because the Kidneys are fleshy and apt to receive blood but the Bladder though it be without blood and spermatick because it receives blood for its Nourishment through the smal Veins is without question subject to Inflamation by too much blood as other Membranes of the Brain or Meninges the Pleura Mediastinum and the like We said that these Inflamations come from Blood or Choller as when Flegm or Melancholly in the Blood make the parts thicker because they cannot pierce into their thick substance The Causes of this Disease are either from things Natural not Natural or Pretematural From Natural things when there is a Natural Infirmity of those parts from the Parents or a great loosness of them a great heat originally in them by which they draw plenty of Humors In Youth these conduce much to an Inflamation From things not Natural as much Venery which weakeneth those parts and draws much blood or other Humors to them Gluttony Drunkenness and eating of Salt and Spiced Meats great Passions of the Mind lying upon the back in a soft bed great Exercise stoppage of some great E●acuations as of the Months and Hemorrhoids or usual bleeding at the Nose those things which cause repletion and evil concoction and drive the humors to the inward bowels From Preternatural things as a stroak or wound upon the Reins or about the Bladder a pressing or bruise of those parts constant Feavers foulness of the Vessels or other parts that purge themselves by Urine as in a Pleurisie Empyema or imposthume in the side Obstruction of the Spleen breaking of the Mesentery and the like And lastly Disease of those parts do cause Inflamation as the stone
thus Take of Comphry and Plantane Roots of each one ounce Plantane Leaves one handful Pomegranate Flowers and yellow Myrobalans of each one dram Plantane and Purslain seed of each half a dram red Roses one pugil boyl them to a pint In the straining dissolve of Syrup of Quinces three ounces make a Julep for three Doses For the same end you may make a Pouder or an Opiate thus Take of Plantane Purslain and Coriander seeds prepared and red Roses of each one ounce prepared Coral Bole-armenick prepared Pearl and Tormentil Roots of each one scruple Nutmeg half a dram mix them into Pouder Take of old Conserve of Roses four ounces Bole prepared Coral and burnt Harts-born of each one scruple with Syrup of Quinces make an Opiate Erastus highly commends the Syrup of Comphry Roots and Sloes which he saith he used with good success in these Diseases Also Narcoticks or Stupefactives used wisely are very good as new Treacle Syrup of Poppies and Laudanum If it continue long Sheeps Milk Cow or Asses Milk are excellent if you first consume the Whey thereof with often quenching Flints therein and he may use it in the morning as we shewed in other Cures Sweating is commended by Authors by which means the serous Humor is drawn outward But it is to be mistrusted because it is very like to purge by Urine and encrease the distemper of the Bowels But if it be used at any time it must be of the mildest sort as of Roots of China Sarsa Endive Borrage Sorrel boyled in Water or for those who are consumed in Chicken Broth but we think it safer to provoke sweat by outward means as by a vapor from some convenient Decoction in a wooden Instrument Such Sudorificks as are prescribed in malignant Feavers are excellent especially if Spirit of Vitriol be in them to quench Thirst stay the flux and resist the malignity For Drink let the Patient use Iron'd Water with sharp and astringent Syrups or a Decoction of Sloes and the inward Bark of an Oak by which Medicine even alone Erastus saith that he cured this Disease in a Boy Outwardly Apply a Fomentation to the Loyns made of Sorrel Roots Plantane Pomegranate peels Sumach Seeds and the like with a little Vinegar or which is most proper make a Bath of the same Decoction to sit in And anoint the part with Ungu●nt of Roses Sanders and Comitissa mixed together or this following Take of Oyl of Roses and Myrtles of each one ounce red Sanders red Roses and red Coral of each one scruple Juyce of Plantane one ounce Wax as much as will make an Oyntment Then you must allay the Symptomes that accompany this Disease as thirst watching consumption and the like by their Remedies mentioned in their proper Chapters Chap. 7. Of Pissing the Bed of Involuntary Pissing or not containing of Vrine THe not holding of the Urine consists in the hurting of the Retentive action of the Bladder as Diabetes or extraordinary pissing comes from the hurt done to the attractive faculty and Dysuria from the distemper in the Expulsive so this comes from the disorder in the Retentive Faculty of the Bladder This comes somtimes to people awake and then the Disease is worse somtimes to them asleep and then it is less because then the animal Functions are exercised less freely And this in time of sleep comes two waies either from weakness and loosness of the Sphincter Muscle of the Bladder as in sucking Children weak people and somtimes in them of yeers or from the hurt of the Imagination for many do piss their Beds either from too much drink or from the exquisite sence of the Bladder and the Urines sharpness with some consent of their will when they dream they are pissing against a wall or other place and they are so accustomed to it that it is done without any distemper either of the Bladder or its Sphincter nor are they to be cured with Medicines but by change of their foolish Imagination as Children by whipping or in those of yeers by adorning those places which they dream they piss upon with some costly things and shewing them often The true cause of this is in the Sphincter Muscle which suffers either from its self or by consent from other parts It comes divers waies by consent as when the whol Body is weak and the vital heat spent as in dying men or when the whol Body or half of it is taken with the Palsey or those branches of Nerves which come from the Os Sacrum to the Bladder somtimes the loosness of the Muscle comes from the pain only and neerness to other parts affected as in Women with Child from the swelling and pain of the Womb and in the great Disease of the straight Gut The Sphincter Muscle suffers divers waies by its self as when it is wounded as in cutting for the Stone or in deep Ulcers which hinder its contraction and shutting But the chief and usual cause is a cold and moist distemper which is most fit to weaken and make loose the part Which is produced of a cold and moist Native temper Youth old Age Women and the Diseases of the whol Body or some parts thereof coming of a moist and cold distemper to these you may add external causes often mentioned But here we may dispute how contrary Effects may be produced of the same Cause for Hippocrates in Coac saies that stoppage of the Urine comes of a cold cause in these words A stoppage of Vrine coming of cold is worst of all now not holding and stopping are contrary We must answer that when a cold distemper doth only hurt or abolish the sence of the Bladder there may be a suppression of Urine because the Bladder cannot be sensible of provocation to expel Urine but if the motive faculty which is in the Sphincter Muscle be hurt by reason of the loosness of it the Urine cannot be retained The Signs of this Disease either shew this Disease to be by consent and these must be taken from the Diseases before mentioned which are apt to produce this not holding the Urine which if you find you may conclude that the disease comes from them but if they be absent then you must bethink yourself of the propriety of the Disease to the part which will be easily discovered if it come from a wound and Ulcer or the like Disease of the Sphincter but if neither of these appear you must consider of the cold and moist distemper of the part and this is known by the causes both internal and external and by the effects which depend upon them as softness of the whol Body whiteness loosness of the Nerves and Privities Childhood Age evil Flegmatick Concoction and the like As for the Prognostick This Disease is incurable in old men by reason of their great moistness and the loss of Vital heat which cannot be repaired In an acute Feaver involuntary Pissing is very dangerous for it comes either of a Delirium
of the extream bitterness is an enemy to the Child and is thought to open the mouths of the veines But if sometimes the use thereof seems necessary in some grevious infirmities of the stomach which are wont frequently to infest women with Child the first months of their being with Child bearing let it be carefully washed with Rose-water that the acrimony thereof may be taken away or let it be mixt with strengthening and astringent things as Rhubarb Mastich and such like Clysters are not very safe because by compressing the Womb they may cause abortion So that when there is need of them and in women accustomed to that kind of evacuation they must be made in less quantity and of such things as are rather mollfying and lenefying than much purging In a word touching Sweat-drivers Piss-drivers and such things as move the Courses our Opinion is That Movers of the Courses properly so called are never to be used in women with Child And Piss-drivers because they likewise are apt to bring down the Courses ought to be suspected and if the necessity of some disease require the use of them the gentler must be made choice of And finally Sweat-drivers may be safely given because they drive the humors out by the habit of the Body whereby no danger of abortion is incurred in so much that some women in the middle of their being with Child have bin Cured of the whores Pox without harm to their Child Chap. 17. Of Abortion or Miscarriage ABortion or Miscarriage is the bringing forth of an imperfect or unripe Child And consequently a child dead in the Womb is not counted an Abortion till it be excluded So that whether alive or dead Child be brought fourth not being ripe nor having attained to the just term of growth which it ought to have had in the Womb it is to be termed an Abortion or Miscarried Child The Causes of Abortion are some internal some external The internal may be reduced to four heads viz. to the Humors to the Child to the Womb and to the Mothers diseases The humors may cause Abortion while they offend in quantity or in quality They offend in Quantity either by way of excess or of Defect Humors offending by way of excess are seen in a Plethorick or over-full Constitution of Body for Blood being more plentyfull than is requisite to Nourish the Infant in the Womb flowes into the veines of the Womb and is excluded by way of the monthly Courses and brings away the Child with it Defect of Humor fitting to Nourish springs from such Causes which are able to draw the Nourishment from the Child as fasting whether voluntary or forced as when women with Child loath all kind of Meat or vomit it up again a thin diet in acute diseases immoderate bleeding by the Nose Haemorrhoides Womb or by immoderate Phlebotomy Whereupon Hippocrates in Aphor. 34. Sect. 5. If a woman with Child go very much to stool it is to be feared that she will Miscarry Hereunto may be referred extream leanness of the whol body wherein there is not Blood enough to nourish the Infant Of which Hippocrates in Aphor. 44. Sect. 5. Speakes thus Women with Child being very lean not by nature but accident as famin long-sicknes c. they Miscarry untill they get their flesh again In respect of the Child Abortion may happen if it be over great so that it cannot by reason of its bulk be contained in the Womb hence it falls often out that little Women miscarry especially if they be married to Men Bigger than ordinary whose Children grow very great and find not in the Womb place large enough to contain them till they come to their perfect growth Which made Hippocartes say In his Book of superfoetation If any Woman conceive frequently and do duly and at a certain period of time Miscarry as in her second third or fourth month or later the narrowness of her Womb is in fault which is not able to contain the Child as it grows great Also plurality of Children may cause abortion as when two or three or more are contained in the Womb at one time for then the Womb overloaden excludes the Children before the fit time which is the cause that Women often Miscarry of twinns Also the dead Child is to be reckoned among the causes of Abortion for as soon as the Child is dead Nature doth forthwith set her self to cast it forth Abortion happens in respect of the Womb it self if it be not of largness and capacity enough sufficiently to widen itself according as the child grows as was shewed above out of Hippocrates As also if there be any thing preternatural in the Womb as an Inflamation a Scirrhous Tumor an Impostume and very many diseases besides And finally if the Womb be overmoist and slack that it cannot contain the Child so well as it ought to do In respect of the Mothers diseases Abortion comes two waies First of all when as her diseases are communicated to the Child whereby it is killed or so weakened that it cannot receive due nourishment nor growth such as are continual and intermitting feavers the Whores-Pocks and many such like Secondly when the said diseases of the Mother do cause great evacuations or great commotions or the Body as ●●rge Bleedings from what part of the Body soever fluxes of the Belly grievous swoonings Falling-sickness Vomiting and Tenesmus that is perpetual going to the stool and voiding nothing but a little slime which above all other diseases is wont to cause Abortion because by that frequent and almost continual endeavour of going to stool which perpetually attends this disease the Muscles of the Belly are perpetually contracted and do more compress the Womb than the streight Gutt upon which the Womb rests which continual compression or squeezing of the Womb doth at last cause Abortion External causes which further Abortion do some of them kill the Child others draw away its nourishment and others dissolve those bands wherewith the Child is fastened to the Womb. The Child is killed by greivous commotions of mind as Anger sadness Terror c. meates earnestly longed for and not obtained strong purging Medicaments such things as provoke the Courses such things as drive forth the Child such things as are reckoned by a secret property to destroy the Child in the Womb abominable smells especially the stink of a Candle ill put out The Child is deprived of its nourishment by the Mothers being famished and by immoderate loss of her Blood especially when the Child is big As Hippocrates teaches in the Aphor. 60 Sect. 5. The bands which fasten the Child to the Womb are loosed by vehement exercise Danceing Running Rideing or Jolting in a Coach or Cart carrying of an heavy weight or lifting it from the ground a violent fall and squelch a Blow upon the Belly that mauls the Child vehement motion of the Belly by coughing vomiting loosness neezing convulsions crying out immoderate or
reason of plenty of excrements heaped together in the first Region and distending the Belly it suffocates the child or it vitiates the blood in the whol habit of the Body rendring it unfit to nourish the child or it fills the Vessels of the womb which retain the child full of slime and snot This Badness of Humors may likewise be holpen by blood-letting but it must be in a lesser quantity seeing the principla scope of the Cure is by frequent Purgations to take away the super fluous Excrements of the Body And in the spaces between Purge and Purge such things must be used as help the distemper of the Bowels mitigate the sharpness of Humors if there be any or thicken the said Humors in case they be too thin Or if slegmatick Humors are too rife they must be discussed by Sweat-drivers Piss-drivers and other Remedies Howbeit we must diligently observe that whatever ill humor abounds Issues are wonderful profitable to prevent Abortion of which Zacutus Lusitanus gives a special note in these words By most happy Experiments I have observed That frequent Abortion caused by corrupted Humors which slow from the whol Body to the Womb and by their evil disposition or abundance do kill the child is hereby as by a most present help prevented Many women did miscarry upon this very account among which some having often times brought forth a Child of seven months or four months growth but torn and putrefied could by no other means be freed from so great a Calamity save by Issues made in their Arms and Thighs which were alwaies made at the beginning of the fluxion by which means they went out their time and brought forth Children healthy and not defiled with any Infection The peculiar Diseases of the Womb as over great Moisture Swellings Ulvers and such like must be cured by their proper Remedies described in the Chapters which treat of them In women with Child if the same Causes be present as in other women the difficulty is yet greater because big-bellied women cannot so easily bear all kind of Remedies Yet lest being destitute of all help they should remain in extream danger of Miscarriage and Death some kind of Remedies are to be used In case therefore the Patient be too full of blood she must have a Vein opened though with child especially in the first months and that the second and third time if need be Alwaies remembring that there never be much blood taken away at a time Of which kind of bleeding we have discoursed more at large in the foregoing Cure And when there is an abundance of some very bad Humors gentle Purgations must be reiterated especially in the middle months of a womans being with Child And if a moist rheumatick snotty or windy distemper do annoy the Patient we may somtimes proceed to a Sudorifick Di●t at least a gentle one in the stronger sort of women Mean while in the whol course of being with child astringent and strengthening Medicaments are to be used such as have a vertue to hinder Abortion Many of which have been described in our Chapter of immoderate flux of Courses whereunto these following may profitably be added Take of Kermes and Tormentil Roots of each three drams Mastich one dram and an half Make all into a Pouder of which give the Patient half a dram at certain distances of time or as much as may be taken up upon the point of a knife Or Take red Coral two drams Kermes berries Date Stones of each one dram Shavings of Ivory half a dram Pearls not bored through ascruple Make of all a Pouder Or ler her swallow every day certain grains of Mastich in the morning Our ordinary women do frequently use Plantane Seed which they take in the morning about the quantity of half a dram with Wine and Water or in an Egg or Broth or by it self almost every day the whol time of their being with Child and that not in vain To the same purpose very effectual Electuaries are compounded according to this following Example Take Conserve of Roses two ounces Citron peels candied six drams Myrobalans candied Pulp of Dates of each half an ounce Coral prepared Pearls prepared and Shavings of Ivory of each a dram With Syrup of quinces make all into an Opiate of which let the Patient take often the quantity of a Chestnut If a Liquid form shall be more desired a Decoction of Tormentil Roots sweetened with Conserve of Roses may profitably be given The following Lozenges are very good for they strengthen and do by little and little free the Body from Excrements though somtimes they do not visibly purge Take Mace the three sorts of Sanders Rhubarb Senna Carals Pearls of each a scruple Sugar dissolved in Rose-water four ounces Make all into Lozenges weighing three drams apiece Let her take one twice a week by it self or dissolved in a little Broth. Outwardly Oyntments and Plaisters are to be applied made after this manner Take Ship-pitch half an ounce Frankincense an ounce Mastich half an ounce Dragons Blood and red Roses of each two drams Make all into a Cerate or Plaister Or Take Oyl of Myrtles and Mastich of each an ounce red Sanders and yellow Hypocistis Acacia of each half an ounce Spodium red Roses of each two drams Bole Armoniack Terra Sigillata Shavings of Ivory of each two scruples Turpentine washed in Plantane Water an ounce Wax as much as shall suffice Make all into a Cerate or Plaister spread it upon a Cloth and apply it to the Reins Plaisters are compounded of the Mass of Emplastrum pro Matrice and Emplastrum contra Rupturam to be applied to the Region of the Share and of the Loyns Or after this manner following Take of the Mass or Rowl of Emplastrum pro Matrice three ounces Bistort Roots Acacia Hypocistis Pomegranate peels of each half an ounce Ladanum six drams Moisten and soften them with Juyce of Quinces and make a Rowl of Plaister for the use aforesaid Concerning Plaisters it is to be observed That they must not be worn long together but taken off ever and anon otherwise if they stick too long upon the Back they do so heat the Kidneys that the poor women are somtimes troubled with sharpness of Urine or do somtimes piss Sand Stones yea and Blood it self Neither must we omit such things which are accounted by a secret property of their Nature to retain a Child in the womb as an Aegle-stone worn about the Neck a Load-stone applied to the Navel Corals Jaspers Smaragds Bones found in the Hearts of Stags and such like worn under the Arm-pits or hanged about the Neck Zacutus Lusitanus in Obs 152. of the Second Book of wonderful Cures commends a Girdle made of the Hide of a Sea-horse and if that be not to be had he saith a Wolfs Skin may profitably be used instead thereof And that the success of these Medicaments may be happy the Patient must be enjoyned to rest
to five or six grains Oyl of Cinnamon to four or five Drops Oyl of Amber to twelve or fifteen Drops in VVine Broth or other Liquor Sneezing hastens the Birth or Hippocrates in the Aphor. 35. Sect. 5. Sneezing which happens to a woman in sore Travail is good Sneezing may be provoked by the following Pouder Take White Hellebore half a dram Long Pepper one scurple Castoreum five grains Make all into a Pouder and blow thereof into her ●st●●lls the quantity of a Pease The same Hippocrates prescribes another Remedy in the first Book of womens diseases which is omitted by all authors almost And that is the opening of one of the lower veines of the Body which he propounds in these words But if saith he a Big-bellied woman be so stopped that she cannot bring forth but continues divers daies in her ●ains if she be a yong woman vigorous and full of Blood her Anckleveines must be opened and Blood taken away according as her strength will bear Although this remedy be never used by our Practitioners and it seems much to be feared because in Travail nothing is so needful as strength which may be weakened by Blood-letting Yet if difficult Travail do arise from fullness of blood which Hippocrates doth insinuate in those words where he saies If the woman be yong and in the prime of her strength and very full of Blood there is no question but bleeding may be very profitable because the Veines being very full of Blood are wont to make al other inward passages of the Body more strait Whence it comes to pass that in pains of the Stone in the kidneys the like Blood-letting doth often work wonders and facilitate the expulsion of Stones conteined both in the kidneys and Ureters Also hard Travail may be holpen not only by those inward Medicines prescribed but likewise by outward Let the Midwife therefore frequently anoint the Womb of the Childing woman with Oyls of Lillies sweet Almonds Lin-Seed and such like Also let her belly be fomented on the nether parts with an emollient Decoction of Marsh-mallow and Lilly Roots Leaves of Mallows Violets Mugwort Seeds of Line and Fenugreek with the flowers of Chamomel and Melilot Let sharp Clysters be administred by the provokeing virtue of which the expulsive faculty of the womb may be likewise ●oused up and the Gutts being emptied will afford larger space for the womb Let her Navel be anointed with Oyl of Amber Some commend the Gaul of an Hen applyed to the same part Also such things may be used which are thought by a peculiar property to help the Birth as Aegle-Stone Load-Stone Storax and the rest being fastened to the Hipps Hartmannus Commends the Eyes of an Hare taken in the month of March which are carefully to be taken out and dried entire with Pepper Let one of these with Pepper be so tied to her Belly that the Sight of the Eye may touch her belly and it will bring forth the Child be it alive or dead Which being done take away the Eye least it bring forth the Womb it self He saies likewise that it is good to bring out the Mole Heed is likewise to be taken that the woman carry no Precious Stones about her either in rings or otherwise but let her lay them al away for many of them are conceived by a peculiar property to retain the Child in the womb If the Child seem to be weak it must be refreshed both with strengthening things given to the Mother as warm wine Confectio Alkermes Cinnamon Water and also with things outwardly applied as with a Crust of Bread or a Rose Cake strewed with Pouder of Nutmegs Cinnamon Cloves Kermes Berries and sprinkled with Aqua Imperialis or with warm Wine Or with a peice of Wether-Mutton a little broiled upon a Gridiron and sprinkled with Water of Roses or of Orange-flowers with the call of a wether newly kil'd not yet cold and such like If the Child begin to come forth in a disorderly manner as by putting out one Foot one Hand or any other way the Mid-wife must no waies receive it on that manner but thrust it into the Womb again and compose it to a right and natural posture or form of egress Which must be done by laying the Childing woman on her Back in the Bed with her Head somwhat low and her Buttocks high and then gently pressing her Belly towards the short Ribs and thrusting the Child into the Womb. Afterward let the Midwife endeavour to put the Child into a right posture for coming out by an artificial Hand procuring that the Child turn its face towards the Mothers Back and its Buttocks and shighes let her lift up towards the Mothers navel and so hasten the same unto a natural manner of coming for●h When all Hope of the Childs coming forth is past or when the Mether is almost dead some Authors proceed to the Caesarean Section that is to cut the Child out of the Womb as Caesar was cut out of which Francilcus Rossetus hath Printed a most elegant Treatise in which by many reasons and examples he endeavours to shew that such a thing may be somtimes done with good success Howbeit seeing this Operation is very dangerous and terrible it ought seldom or never to be practised by a discreet Physitian that would preserve his own reputation Chap. 19. Of A Dead Child IN sore Travel of Child-birth by reason of great and long Labour the Child is oftentimes killed and somtimes before a womans pains come upon her the Child happens to die through some preternaturall accidents such as those which are wont to cause Abortion and if it hath not attained to the due time of natural Birth it causes Abortion but if it have it causes an hard and sore Travel Because in a due and naturall Birth both the Mother and the Child ought to join their Forces to bring it from the Dark Dungeon to the Liberty of Day All such things therefore which cause difficult Child-birth being in a greater and more grievous degree are of power to kill the Child But especially the Child is wont to be kild if it come in so untoward and preposterous a figure that it can by no means be brought forth in that manner neither can the Midwife or Chyrurgion draw it forth or reduce it to a better Posture For while sticking thus in the mouth of the Womb it frustrates all the endeavours of the Mother straining her self to exclude it it comes to pass that in those s●●ainings various motions and compressions somtimes both Mother and Child somtimes the Mother alone and somtimes the Child alone doth die It is to be admired which Fabricius Hildanus writes touching two women which died through hard Labour in whom their Wombes were found broken a sunder and the Heads of the Infants in their Mothers Bellies By which we may gather how strongly a lusty Child doth labour to work it self out of the Mothers Womb. A Dead Child is
known when the motion thereof ceaseth which either the Mother did feel or the Midwife perceive by h●r hand laid on or other warm and strengthening things which were wont to awaken and rouse up the powers thereof when they were in a slumber or stupified Also the Mothers find a greater sense of weight with which and pain of the Belly they are troubled when they turn from one side to another they perceive the Child to roul from one side to another like a Stone The lower part of their Belly feels very cold the native heat being extinguished and those spirits dissipated which were formerly in the Child their Eyes become hollow and troubled their face and Lips are pale their extream parts appear cold and of a Leaden-colour their Duggs become slap and flaggy and at length when the Child rots stinking moistures flow from the Womb like water and blood their belly is blown up with vapours asending thereunto a filthy smell and a stinking Breath comes both out of the Mouthes of such women and from their whol bodies If the After-Birth be excluded before the Child it is a certain token that the Child is dead in the Womb. As to the Prognostick A Child dead in the Womb is a very exceeding dangerous thing and if it be not timely voided forth it is wont to cause Feavers Faintings Dead-sleeps Convulsions and death it self Yet somtimes a Child dead in the Womb may be kept a long time as appears by many stories related by divers Authors which Schenkius hath collected in great number as rare Cases and Sennertus hath transcribed out of him touching many Women which have voided the Bones of Children dead and putrefied in the womb by their Water-gate their Dung-gate and by a Swelling that broke in their Belly I have seen one Woman which voided all the bones of her child by her Navel and her Navel growing afterwards whol again she recovered her perfect health The Cute consists wholly in the Exclusion or Extraction of the Child for seeing great danger of life at ends the Mother so long as the dead Child is in her Womb as soon as ever by the foregoing signs we certainly collect the Child is dead we must make hast to force it out Which is done by the same Remedies which were formerly propounded to hasten the Birth But among them we must chuse out the most strong and effectual whereunto some other things may be added which are yet stronger after this manner Take Leaves of Savin dried round Birth-wort Roots Troches of Mirrh and Castoreum of each one dram Cinnamon half a dram Saffron a scruple Mix all into a Pouder The Dose is a dram in Savin Water Or Take Dictamnus Creticus Savin Borax of each a dram Mirrh Asarum Roots Cinnamon Saffron of each half a dram Mix and make all into a Pouder The Dose is a dram in the foresaid or such like Liquor In the mean time let the Fomentations aforesaid be applied to the Privities the Share and space between the Water and the Dung-Gate adding Briony Roots Roots of wild Cucumer Florentine Orice round Birthwort called Aristolochia rotunda and Broom-flowers After Fomentation anoint the said Parts with Vnguentum de Arthanita or with this following Take Aristolochia rotunda or round Birthwort Coloquintida and Agarick of each one dram Gum Ammoniack dissolved in Wine and Bulls Gall of each two drams With Oleum Cherinum as much as shall suffice Make all into an Oyntment Also let this Pessary be put up into the Womb Take Aristolochia rotunda Orice Root Black Hellebore Coloquintida Mirrh of each one dram Galbanum Opopanax of each half a dram With Ox Gall make all into a Pessary Or this Take Ammoniacum Opopanax Castorium Sagapenum black Hellebore wild Vine round Birthwort Pulp of Coloquintida Scammony of each one scruple Euphorbium one dram With Juyce of Rue Bindweed wild Cucumer and an Oxes Gaul make all into a Pessary Zacutus Lusitanus in Obs ●54 of the Second Book of his strange and Admirable Cures doth testisie that a dead Child in the ninth months growth producing many Symptomes in the Mother was driven out by this Pessary and by help of an Oyly Bath wherein was mixed the Decoction of such Herbs as do open and widen the Passages of the Body A Fumigation of Galbanum or an Asses Hoof may be received by a Funnel into the Womb. If the Matter hang long it will be good the woman being sufficiently strong to give her a purging Medicine whereby evil Humors which in this case are easily collected may be evacuated and the dead Child comequently cast forth Angelus Sala in his Book which he calls Triumphus Emeticorum that is the Triumph of Vomits doth witness That in this case he had often with happy success given four or five grains of Mercurius vitae which doth most powerfully expel the dead Child and excel all other Medicines in that point Which notwithstanding in regard of its vehement working requires great Caution and Discretion in the Physitian that would use it If after Medicines long tried the dead Child cannot be ejected we must implore the Chyrurgions aid Who may pull it out either by Instruments as Paulus Aegineta describes the manner or only help of the hand as is taught by Carolus Stephanus Bauthine and others all which are diligently transcribed by Schenkius and Sennertus Chap. 20. Of the After-birth retained IN a Natural Birth commonly the Secundine is excluded presently after the Child yet somtimes it is retained in the Womb by which means the Mother is in great Danger of her life The internal Causes of this retention are the over thickness of those coats and their too great compactness by which means they cling more fast to the sides of the Womb their being swelled through con●luence of humors which is stirred up in a laborious Travel weakness of the Mother caused by hard Labor so that she wants strength to exclude the After-Birth and the shutting up of the Mouth of the womb after the Child is come away But the external causes are the Cold Air by force whereof the Secundine is repelled and the Wombs mouth stopped Certain smells by which the Womb may be enticed upwards or agitated some greivous passion of mind as fear or suddain terror or frowardness of the Childing woman which will not abide in such a posture nor use such endeavours as are necessary to this work the over great weight of the Infant by which the Navil-string is broak unawards and the secundine is left within and the Error of an unexperienced Midwife which cuts the Navil-strings too soon or holds them not fast in her le●t Hand as she ought to do for if she let them go they are drawn back into the Womb and there lie hid with the After-Birth which they ought to have holpen to pull out The Tokens of a Secundine retained are needless its apparant of it self yet somtimes a bit thereof is severed from the whol and
thick and clammy humors abound the Syrup of Vineger will be very profitable in stead of those last named Also somtimes Conserve of Roses Violets or Borrage is wont to be mingled with cleer Water boyled with Barley Water and to be strained through an Hippocras bag for ordinary drink unto which some drops of spirit of Vitriol may profitably be added Or a Tincture of Roses is made after this manner most delightful in colour and in tast Take Red Roses one ounce Bloodwarm Water three pints spirit of sulphur or Vitriol one dram and an half Let them stand infusing cold for three or four hours To the strainings add white Sugar four ounces Rose-Water half a pint Make thereof a clear Julep for ordinary drink Also Julepus Alexandrinus is very good and extream pleasant It is thus made Take Fountain Water one pint Rosewater Juyce of Lemmons and white Sugar of each four ounces Boyl them over a light fire till you have taken away the Scum As for other things pertaining to Diet Sleep is extream good and watchings bad Yet over much Sleep doth overwhelm the natural heat and hinder the Evacuation of excrements Rest is necessary in acute Feavers but in long Feavers light and gentle exercise is good Also we must endeavor that nothing be retained which ought naturally to be expelled howbeit al immoderate Evacuations which exhaust the strength are to be stopped and al vehement Perturbations of mind must be turned out of Doors Among manual Operations Blood-letting holds the cheifest place for it doth not only diminish plenitude whether it be a simple fulness so as to stretch the Vessels or only a fulness with reference to the strength of the Patient whether it be in the whol body or in some Part but also revels the influx of Humors Causing obstructions cools the whol body and makes it perspicable keeps back putrefaction and furthers the concoction of putrefying Humors Presently therefore and at the beginning of the Disease blood must be drawn unless weakness hinder as in the Swooning Feaver and other like Cases and that after the Belly hath been loosened with a Clyster or a Suppository How much blood should be taken it gathered from the Patients strength from the greatness of the Ple●hora Custom of the Patient to bleed or not to bleed and other circumstances The Antients in the Synochus Putrida and the burning Feaver did let blood til the Patient fainted away But it is much more safe as we have said in the Cure of a simple Synochus to take away at several times so much as shall be sufficient then suddenly to put the Patient in danger of death Avicenna in a burning Feaver and in a continual Tertian doth forbid letting blood unless the Urine be thick and red For he fears lest Choller should be the more inflamed which he saith is bridled by Blood But the wiser Physitians do explode this Opinion of his seeing these kind of Feavers are often terminated even by Nature her self by bleeding at the Nose and they do somtimes cause Frenzies and other Inflamations and finally because Blood-letting doth potently refrigerate doth rather stop than further the Ebulition or boyling and working of the Blood and Choller comes away as wel as Blood when a Vein is opened so that in that Mass of Blood which is in the greater Veins remaining there is the same proportion of blood to Choller which there was before Nay verily when a Vein is opened if the sick party be any thing lusty and the blood flow amain only the putrid Blood which is offensive to Nature is voided the purer remaining in the Veins which few Authors have taken notice of although it be in the course of Practice every where observable For if the Blood flow out of the Vein drop by drop it is the purest Blood because it comes out of the Vein by its own proper motion But if it spring out with a forceable stream it appears foul and corrupted Nature expelling the worser part of the Mass of Blood Howbeit Blood is more sparingly to be taken from such as are of a very Chollerick Constitution in the middle of Summers Heat and the Dog-Daies than in other Natures and times But in Flegmatick and Melanchollick Feavers Blood must be taken away in lesser quantity and evermore great regard is to be had to Coindicants and Contraindicants forasmuch as Quotidian Feavers do for the most part happen unto Children or old Persons in cold Countries and cold Seasons of the yeer which considerations do lessen the Quantity of Blood which otherwise the Disease or its Cause require should be taken away When the Feaver is caused by over much labor blood must be taken away more sparingly If a Feaver happen by over great use of Carnal Embracements Blood-letting is pernicious Concerning the time of Blood-letting it is to be noted That a Vein must not be opened presently after the Patient hath eaten but after Digestion is past and after the Patient hath been at stool Again Blood is to be let when the Feaver is most remiss and not in the vigor thereof for then Nature is not able to bear both the violence of the Disease and the loss of Blood As for the repletion of Blood-letting if the same be necessary to cause Evacuation it must be repeated the same day if for Revulsions sake on another day For where Evacuation is necessary especially in acute Diseases the Body must be suddenly changed into another condition also it often happens that a Disease is quickly past its first time or beginning so that afterward we cannot so conveniently open a Vein But in Revulsion we have respect to the motion of the Humors which is then best ordered when it is done at divers times some space being interposed whereby Nature becomes accustomed to a contrary motion For in the space between Bleedings the Blood which was shed into the parts regurgitates into the Veins and by another Blood-letting is profitably drawn forth We understand that Blood-letting must be iterated if that blood which was first drawn forth were very much corrupted and there is reason to think that there is yet a great quantity thereof abiding in the Veins Yea verily Although the Blood at first seem pure and uncorrupted yet must we not desist from taking the same away but continue so doing until it appear more impure and corrupted And truly that Precept delivered by Hippocrates in his 4. de Victus Rat. in Morbis acutis in the Cure of a Pleutisie may very profitably be observed in acute Feavers viz. That Blood-lettings be so long continued til the blood change color so that if at first corrupt blood come away we must let it run till it appear more pure and on the other side if at the first the blood appear laudable we must suffer to flow til that which is impure and corrupted be come away Yet is there some diversity to be observed in both Cases For if at first good
practising Physick 7 A Treatise of the Rickets being a Disease common to Children wherein is shewed 1 The Essence 2 The Causes 3 The Signs 4 The Remedies of the Disease Published in Latin by Dr. Glisson Dr. Bate and Dr. Regemorter translated into English And corrected by N. Culpeper 8 The Practice of Physick containing seventeen Books A Godly and Fruitful Exposition on the first Epistle of Peter By Mr. John Rogers Minister of the Word of God at Dedham in Essex The Wonders of the Load-stone By Samuel Ward of Ipswitch An Exposition on the Gospel of the Evangelist St. Matthew By Mr. Ward Clows Chyrurgery Marks of Salvation Christians Engagement for the Gospel by John Goodwin Great Church Ordinance of Baptism Mr. Love's Case containing his Petitions Narrative and Speech Vox Pacifica or a perswasive to peace Dr. Prestons Saints submission and Satans Overthrow Pious Mans Practice in Parliament Time Mr. Symsons Sermon at Westminster Mr. Feaks Sermon before the Lord Major Mr. Phillips Treatise of Hell of Christs Geneology Eaton on the Oath of Allegiance and Covenant shewing that they oblige not Eleven Books of Mr. Jeremish Burroughs lately published As also the Texts of Scripture upon which they are grounded 1 The Rare Jewel of Christian Contentment on Phil. 4. 11. Wherein is shewed 1 What Contentment is 2 It is an Holy Art and Mystery 3 The Excellencies of it 4 The Evil of the contrary sin of Murmuring and the Aggravations of it 2 Gospel Worship on Levit. 10. 3. Wherein is shewed 1 The right manner of the Worship of God in general and particularly In Hearing the Word Receiving the Lords Supper and Prayer 3 Gospel Conversation on Phil. 1. 17. Wherein is shewed 1 That the Conversations of Beleevers must be above what could be by the Light of Nature 2 Beyond those that lived under the Law 3 And sutable to what Truths the Gospel holds forth To which is added The Misery of those men that have their Portion in this Life only on Psal 17. 14. 4 A Treatise of Earthly-Mindedness Wherein is shewed 1 What Earthly-mindedness is 2 The great Evil thereof on Phil. 3. part of the 19. Verse Also to the same Book is joyned A Treatise of Heavenly-Mindedness and Walking with God on Gen. 5. 24. and on Phil. 3. 20. 5 An Exposition on the fourth fifth sixth and seventh Chapters of the Prophesie of Hosea 6 An Exposition on the eighth ninth and tenth Chapters of Hosea 7 An Exposition on the eleventh twelfth and thirteenth Chapters of Hosea being now compleat 8 The Evil of Evils or the exceeding Sinfulness of Sin on Job 36. 21. 9 Precious Faith on 2 Pet. 1. 1. 10 Of Hope on 1 John 3. 3. 11 Of Walking by Faith on 2 Cor. 5. 7. Twelve several Books of Mr. William Bridge Collected into one Volumn Viz. 1 The Great Gospel Mystery of the Saints Comfort and Holiness opened and applied from Christs Priestly Office 2 Satans Power to Tempt and Christs Love to and Care of His People under Temptation 3 Thankfulness required in every Condition 4 Grace for Grace or the Over-flowing of Christs Fulness received by all Saints 5 The Spiritual Actings of Faith through Natural Impossibilities 6 Evangelical Repentance 7 The Spiritual-Life and In-being of Christ in all Beleevers 8 The Woman of Canaan 9 The Saints Hiding-place in time of Gods Anger 10 Christs Coming is at our Midnight 11 A Vindication of Gospel Ordinances 12 Grace and Love beyond Gifts A Congregational Church is a Catholick Visible Church By Samuel Stone in New England A Treatise of Politick Powers wherein seven Questions are Answered 1 Whereof Power is made and for what ordained 2 Whether Kings and Governors have an Absolute Power over the People 3 Whether Kings and Governors be subject to the Laws of God or the Laws of their Countrie 4 How far the People are to obey their Governors 5 Whether all the people have be their Governors 6 Whether it be Lawful to depose an evil Governor 7 What Confidence is to be given to Princes The Compassionate Samaritan Dr. Sibbs on the Philippians The Best and Worst Magistrate By Obadiah Sedgwick The Craft and Cruelty of the Churches Adversaries By Matthew Newcomen A Sacred Panegerick By Stephen Martial Barriffs Military Discipline The Immortality of Mans Soul The Anatomist Anatomized King Charls his Case or an Appeal to all Rational Men concerning his Tryal Mr. Owens stedfastness of the Promises A Vindication of Free Grace Endeavoring to prove 1 That we are not elected as holy but that we should be holy and that Election is not of kinds but persons 2 That Christ did not by his Death intend to save all men and touching those whom he intended to save that he did not die for them only if they would beleeve but that they might beleeve 3 That we are not justified properly by our beleeving in Christ but by our Christ beleeving in 4 That that which differenceth one man from another is not the improvement of a common ability restored through Christ ●o all men in general but a principle of Grace wrought by the Spirit of God in the Elect. By John Pawson Six Sermons preached by Doctor Hill Vix 1 The Beauty and Sweetness of an Olive Branch of Peace and Brotherly Accommodation budding 2 Truth and Love happily married in the Church of Christ 3 The Spring of strengthening Grace in the Rock of Ages Christ Jesus 4 The strength of the Saints to make Jesus Christ their strength 5 The Best and Worst of Paul 6 Gods eternal preparation for his Dying Saints The Bishop of Canterbury's Speech on the Scaffold The King's Speech on the Scaffold The Magistrates Support and Burden By Mr. John Cordel The Discipline of the Church in New England by the Churches and Synod there A Relation of Barbadoes A Relation of the Repentance and Conversion of the Indians in New-England By Mr. Eliot and Mr. Mayhew The History of Montress and his Actions for Charles the First His passions for Charles the Second King of Scots The Institutes of the Laws of England by John Cowel Octavo A description of the Grand Signors Seraglio or Turkish Emperors Court By John Greaves Octavo The reigning error Arraigned at the Bar of scripture and Reason By Francis Fulwood Octavo The state of Future Life By Thomas White Twelves The Royal and delightful Game of Picquet written in French and now rendered into English Octavo De copore Politico or The Elements of Law moral and politick By Thomas Hobs of Malmsbury The History of the Rites Customs and manner of life of the present Jews throughout the World Octavo The London Dispensatory in Latin in Folio The London Dispensatory in Latin in Twelves A Poem upon the late Fight at sea between the two great Fleets of England and Holland These several Books of Physick and Chyrurgerie will shortly be printed in English Riverius Observations with fifteen hundred and seventie other Histories and Observations of other
his Feaver abated and when it was gone the blood stopped The Gums bleed Symptomatically when the blood is sharp and the Liver or Spleen distempered So that in the Scurvy this flux is ordinary Somtimes after a Tooth is drawn there is so great a flux of blood by reason the Artery is torn which is the root of the Tooth that somtimes men have died thereof The Cure of a Symptomatical flux is by bleeding and purging and other Remedies for the bowels As also by Topicks astringing made into Gargarisms Pouders Liniments or Opiates If it come from a Tooth drawn you must first let blood and Cup to make revulsion and apply astringents to the part as a Cataplasm of Bole-Armenick Terra Sigillata Sanguis Draconis and the like astringents made up with the white of an Egg. Also Time alone with the white of an Egg is good But if they do not suffice you must lay the Patients finger upon the part and let him hold it there till the blood congeal above the orifice of the Artery If it cannot be stopt with sleight things use stronger Valeriola obs 3. lib. 5. reports that an old woman who had a Tooth taken forth with the singers only had a violent bleeding upon it from the Artery under the Gum which he stopt with burnt Vitriol when other things failed which is excellent both for astringency and burning Zacutus Lucitanus obs 84. lib. 1. Prax. Med. admir relates a History of one who having a grievous Tooth that ached drew it violently forth and after had a great flux of blood from the Artery torn which when it could not be stopped by Blood-letting Cupping and Astringents nor by laying on the finger nor by burnt Vitriol at last by his advice the place was filled with Gum Arabick which stopt it in three hours space for it hath power to stop cool glutinate and dry The same Zacutus Obs 85. of the same Book reports of a certain strong Soldier who after great pain drew a Tooth violently and bled much from the Artery under the Tooth for two daies the best Physitians use al Astringents to the part with Revulsives and burn the Artery with a hot iron but al in vain for he bled stil even unto death Zacutus being called applied the Plaister of Galen made of Frankinsence Aloes the hairs of an Hare poudered and mixed with the white of an Egg by which in a few hours the blood stopt and the Patient recovered Galen boasteth that he invented this precious Medicine lib. 5. meth cap. 7. and stopped the Artery in the Elbow And cap. 4. of the same Book and in his Book of Curing by Blood-letting Chapter the last he confirmeth the Excellency thereof by many stories Chap. 5. Of the Vcers of the Mouth and Jaws THe smal and superficial Ulcers of the Mouth are usually Aphthae or Trush although in Galen and Hippocrates it is somtimes used for Ulcers in other parts but they which are deeper are absolutely called the Ulcers of the Mouth and Jaws Such as are in the French Pox. These Ulcers breed of sharp Humors or Vapors coming from divers parts into the Jaws so in malignant Feavers they often happen or to those that have hot Livers or foul Bodies So the Children have the Trush as Hipp. aph 24. sect 3. either from the sharpness of the Milk which Ulcerates those tender parts in its passage as Galen teacheth in his Comment upon the same Aphorism or from the corruption of the milk in the Stomach by which sharp vapors are sent to the mouth as Galen affirms 9. de compos med sec loc cap. ultimo Now these Ulcers are divers as some are slighter some more dangerous some are in Children some in Men some are joyned with Inflamation some are without these divers degrees are according to the variety of the Humors of which they come For they proceed either of Blood Choller Flegm or Melancholly or Choller Adust which hath not only a burning but often a malignant quality and begets evil conditioned Ulcers These Differences are known by their proper signs for if the Ulcers be Redish they come of Blood if Yellow of Choller if White of Flegm if Livid or Blew from Melancholly if they stink they are foul As for the Prognostick Aphthae or Truth is easily Cured but deep Ulcers and putrid called in Greek Nomai are hardly Cured And in Children they are more dangerous by reason of their tender flesh which they sooner devour As also because strong Medicines cannot be applied unto them hence somtimes Children die of them when they are Malignant and putrid Also in respect or the Cause those Ulcers which come of Flegm are least dangerous those that come of Blood or Choller more and those that come of Melancholly most of al. Black and Crusty Ulcers are deadly especially in Children The Jaws Ulcerated in a Feaver are hard to be Cured as Hipp. teacheth 3. Prog. Because as Galen explaineth they shew the malignity of the matter The Cure is first by good Diet which Cooleth and Dryeth and hindereth the Generation of the antecedent Cause Therefore when Children have it from their Suck let the Nurse be changed or eate good Diet as also let her blend and be purged if need be especially let her eate Cool Astringent things as Quinces Pears Medlers Services Lettice and Purslain prescribe the same to men and let them avoid sharp things salt and pepper Then you must look to the antecedent Cause with Universal Evacuations according to the age And first Phlebotomy doth powerfully revel the Humors and tempereth their sharpness by Cooling the whol body After this ●up and Scarrifie put Horsleeches behind the Ears and under the Chin and apply a Vesicatory to the Neck behind The next day after you have let blood you must prescribe a Purge agreeable to the Humor offending and the age of the Patient From the beginning of the Cure use Topicks called by Galen Stomatica or Medicines for the Mouth and at first they must be mild as Gargarisms Mouth-waters made of Plantane Honey-suckle and Roses Water with Syrup of dried Roses and of Mulberies or Decoctions of Plantane Bramble Leaves Knot-grass Pomegranat Flowers Red Saunders and the like with Syrup afore mentioned And if there be Inflamation you may do wel if you ad the Juyce of Nightshade Housleek and Purslain with as much Sal Pruneilae as wil not make it too sharp Or a little crude Allum If there be no Inflamation the Chief only Remedy is Spirit of Vitriol or Sulphur which may be used alone to Men upon a little lint at the end of a stick gently touching the part by which it wil be presently Cured if it be a simple Aphtha But to Children you must mix the Spirit aforesaid with Honey of Roses so that it may be but a little sharp and with a little Lint at the end of a Probe often apply it and they wil be quickly Cured If the Ulcers are very painful and
Feaver which after is dispersed from the Heart into the whol body so al the parts being too cold and dry and receiving the intemperate putrifying heat do not wel concoct their nourishment but are ill nourished from whence you may plainly perceive a Consumption of the substance of the whol body for that Feaver by reason of its continuance from the perseverance of the Cause turneth Hectick and it s often joyned with a putrid Feaver which is known by the Urine and by the Distempers extraordinary at sometimes in●omuch that in some Consumptions you may observe sits of an intermitting Feaver A sharp and Corroding Humor either coming from other Parts or breeding in the Lungs is the immediate Cause of an Ulcer in the Lungs First sharp and salt Rhewm falls from the brain which being violent easily ulcerateth the Lungs Somtimes Flegm that is not sharp nor salt wil do the same namely if it lie long in them and putrifie and from the putrifaction ariseth an Acrimony which Corroding Ulcerateth yet this putrid flegm in the Lungs doth not alwayes ulcerate as we may observe in a Catarrh when putrid Matter is spet forth and the Lungs are sound But there are two Conditions for the Causing of an Ulcer one in respect of the matter flowing another in respect of the Lungs In respect of the Matter it is required that it should be so disposed that when it is putrified it begets a sharpness which may cause an Ulcer In respect of the Lungs they must be extraordinary tender and disposed to corruption which in a word is called a Vitious Constitution of the Lungs coming from the Parents usually of which we will speak hereafter Now the Humors that Exulcerate and putrifie the Lungs come from the parts adjoyning as the Pleura Mediastinum Diaphragma rough Artery and especially from an inflamation in them w●●●h comes to Suppuration and turns into an Empyema of which Hippocrates speaks Aphor. 15. S● c. 5. They who fall from a Pleurisie into an Empyema if the Empyema break in fourty dayes and come away are Cured but if not they fall into a Consumption The Humor is in the Lungs when from some vessel broken corroded or opened by a wound the blood flowing doth putrifie or when an Ulcer is left there from the smal pox Somtimes from the evil Constitution of the Lungs evil Humors proceed which corrupt their substance and cause a Consumption and this comes commonly from the Parents from whence a Con●mption is reckoned among the Haereditary diseases of which it is the chief so that we may observe how many whol Families are taken away with this disease This evil Constitution of the Lungs is not in the first qualities but hath some malignant and venemous quality by which it becomes infectious Although we deny not but a soft and loose substance of the Lungs and therefore more fit for Corruption doth much conduce to the breeding of this Disease This evil Constitution of the Lungs causeth that some fal into Consumptions without a Distillation Inflamation or any other evident Cause but only from the fault of the part that corrupteth its own nourishment Somtimes it comes from a Pustulae bred in the Lungs and broken which by Hippocrates 1. de morbis is made two-fold One by him is called A Crude Pustule because it never comes to Suppuration but growing by degrees stops the passage of the breath and at length kils the Patient The other is that which cometh to Suppuration and is called the Imposthume of the Lungs and these come two wayes either by Defluxion or Congestion and the Matter gathered is either in a Bagg or without it in the very substance of the part The thickness of the Bagg often causeth that such an Imposthume is carried many yeers in the Lungs undiscovered and without any hurt to the body From whence Hippocrates saith Aph. 41. Sect. 6. They who have an Imposthume in the body and feel it not it is by reason of the thickness of the Matter or of the place wherein it is that they feel it not For this Cause many who seemed to be in perfect health have suddenly died by an Imposthume broken within of which there are Examples in Ferne●ius lib. 5. de morbis de part ●orb sympt c. 10. among which he mentioneth two Physitians who sore-●aw the danger without signs If the matter which comes from the Imposthume broken flow into the Ventricle of the Heart the sick presently die but if it come to the Bronchia or passages in the Lungs it may be spit up if the body be strong and the matter little in quantity but commonly there is an ulcer remaining in the Lungs which causeth a Consumption Moreover There are external Causes as contagion which is the chiefest for this Disease is so infectious that we may observe Women to be infected by their Husbands and Men by their Wives and all their Children to die of the same not only from the infection of their Parents seed but from the company of him that was first affected And this Contagion is more easily communicated to them that are of kin wherefore it is not safe for a Brother or Sister to enter into the Chamber for the Miasmaza or vapors infective which come from their Lungs and infect the whol Air of the Chamber and being drawn in by others especially if they are any way disposed to the same Disease beget the same disease in their Lungs There are other external Causes especially very hot or cold Air the hot Air doth melt down the sharp humors which are contained in the Brain and sends them to the Lungs The too cold Air by astringing compressing and Squeezing doth cause the like defluxion But the Air in Autumn is most dangerous because by its inequality in heat and cold it causeth sharp and salt distillations whence Hippocrates saith Aph. 10. Sect 3. Autumn is the worst time for People in Consumptions Secondly Sharp and salt meats and drinks do cause a Consumption which sill the Head with salt and sharp vapors And lastly all those internal and external Causes which use to produce spitting of blood which useth to end in a Consumption may be said to be Causes thereof Among the Antecedent Causes evil humors throughout the whol body are accounted the chief which being moved by external causes are sent to the brain and from thence to the Lungs Among which you may reckon the suppression of the Terms Hemorrhoids or other usual evacuations which doth cause Catarrhs and defluxions The aforesaid Causes do produce this Disease especially among those whom Hippocrates calleth Phthirodeis and Pterugodeis that is such as have a straight and distressed breast a long neck and shoulder bones sticking forth who must of necessity fall into this disease if they have tender Lungs or any hereditary inclination thereunto Also they are inclined to a Consumption who have a weak Head which is easily filled winh superfluous Humors which are sent to the
the native heat is spent which Galen cals Na●cosis or Stupefaction as by long bleeding feavers and the like by which the strength of the stomach and other Parts is consumed Evil also and corrupt Humors whether hot or cold do cause want of Appetite The hot are chollerick adust putrid or virulent whether they are bred in the stomach for want of Concoction or brought from other infirm Parts The Cold Humors are Flegmy and Slimy gathered in the stomach by evil Concoction or coming from the whol body as in them who by often Vomitings bring the corruption of other Parts into the stomach Or from the Brain by Catarrhs in which the stomalch useth to be troubled with Flegm The suppression of the Terms and Haemorrhoids also by choaking and smoothering the natural heat do also diminish the Appetite Moreover The distemper of the Brain and Nerves Cause that the Sucking is not flet in the stomach in them who have lost or depraved the Animal Faculty therefore they are ●ick in mind as in an Apoplexy Lethargy Phrenzy Madness and the like as also in a Palsie by reason of the Obstruction of the Nerve of the sixth Conjugation which comes to the Stomach or by reason of the stupefaction thereof by the use of cold and narcotick things The knowledg of this Disease is manifest for the Patient will complain of his want of appetite and loathing of Meat But the signs of the Causes are partly manifest and partly to be discovered by art And first they which cause the want of emptiness are known by former high feeding repletion want of exercise or evacuation long sleep and other Causes of crude Juyces as also if the body be full and the Veins swoln Also the thickness of the Skin signifieth the same for that hinders the dispersing of the nourishment as also some great disease in some particular part by which there is 〈◊〉 dispersing of the Natural heat in the whol Body so that it is so weak that it cannot concoct the nourishment brought to the parts and supply its wants The signs of the second Cause are manifest namely acute malignant pestilential and syntectick● Feavers strong evacuations and other Causes by which there is a great decay of Natural heat in the parts so that they cannot attract necessary nourishment The signs of the third Cause are obstructions whose signs are known in the diseases of the Liver Spleen and Mesentery The signs of the fourth and fifth Cause need a more curious search and first heat in the Praecordia especially in the Stomach thirst dryness and bitterness of the Tongue and Jaws and a Feaver do signifie a hot distemper of the stomach and abundance of Choller And if this hot humor do flow from other parts the disease of that part will shew it as inflamation of the Liver or other part But if no other part seem to suffer you must conjecture that the fault is in the Stomach or that evil meats have been received To these are joyned Cardialgia Heart-scalding Nausea or loathing Vomiting and Purging the Nature of which humors are known by what is sent forth A cold distemper and much flegm is known by cooling Causes afore going or such as disperse the Natural heat and extinguish it as also from the sence of weight in the Stomach from sharp belching or from a slimy thick humor sent out of the mouth or by stool The same is signified by a long Catarrh and a disease in some part which may send flegm or melancholly to the Stomach as of the Spleen Womb or the like Also the distempers of the Brain and Nerves are to be known by their proper signs As to the Prognostick As a good Appetite is good in all Diseases as Hipp. Aph. 33. Sect. 2. saies To be right in mind and to be willing to take that which is brought is good so want of Appetite useth to be an evil sign For it sgnifieth a great digression from the Natural state and it comes as Galen teacheth Com. in 3. Epid. either from evil Humors in the Mouth of the Stomach o● from the loss of the Faculty whose duty it was to be sensible of the want of nourishment and consequently to desire it So Hipp. in 1 Epid. saith concerning men in Consumptions that died in the time of an Epidemical disease they alwaies abhorred meat and drink And so Galen Comment in 3. Epid. saith that he hath seen many in a Plague time which could take no sustenance and died But some who were stronger and took courage and did eat recovered So in Hipp. 3. Epid. Sect. 1. Aegr 2. Hermocrates who died the twenty seventh day abhorred meat all the time and in the last daies could not tast And Sect. 2. of the same Book Aegr 6. Euryanactis her daughter abhorred meat all the while and drank nothing worth speaking of died about twelve daies after But we must observe that loathing of meat is sad if it come from the destruction of the Natural heat but it is not so dangerous if it come from abundance of evil humors and Cacochymia as you may see in Hipp. 7. Epid. by the Son of Cleomenis who without a Feaver abhorred meat for two months through abundance of crude and viscid flegm which he at last vomited up So in the beginning of Diseases and especially of Feavers want of Appetite is not so dangerous because then Nature being busie about the concocting of filthy humors is called from her usual desire of meat But after when the Feaver is appeased and the humors that caused the Disease being spent she returns to her old custom In Children want of Appetite is worse than in others because their substance is moist and easily dissipated and requires more use of nourishment to restore them In men recovered of a Disease loathing threateneth a relapse by reason the reliques of the Disease cause it In a continual Disease loathing and sincere dejections are evil Hipp. Aph. 6. Sect. 7. loathing is an evil sign in long diseases but they who are like to escape have the contrary that is a good appetite But sincere dejections coming do cause a worse Prognostick because Hippocrates understands by sincere dejections such as have no humidity mixed with them when the humor alone without any Water is cast forth whether Choller or Melancholly for these stools do shew that all the Natural humidity is burnt up by the heat of the Feaver In long Diseases of the Guts loathing of meat is evil and with a Feaver worse Hipp. Aph. 3 Sect. 6. when there are deep and putrid Ulcers in a dysentery the Stomach suffering with the Guts ●oth not well concoct which offence arising higher affects the mouth of the Stomach with loathing There are some in Dysenteries who abhor meat from the beginning of the Disease by reason of the wil humors which come from the Liver for the superfluous part of them comes to the mouth of the Stomach which is not alwaies dangerous But in
three drams Myrobalans Chebs and Emblicks parched of each one ounce Bole sealed Earth and Blood-stone of each six drams Coriander seeds prepared one ounce and an haly Spodium or burnt Ivory two drams Roses one ounce the Species of three Sanders without Camphire half an ounce Rust of Iron prepared one ounce Barley flower two ounces Oyl of Mastich and Myrtles of each as much as is sufficient make an Emplaister to cover the whol Belly from the Cartilage called Ensiformis or Xiphoides to the Os Pectinis or the Bone at the bottom of the Belly You may also make a Fomentation for the whol Belly of a Decoction of astringent things made in Iron Water with a little red Wine and Vinegar Or Take of red Roses two handfuls Wormwood and Mints of each one handful Nutmeg and Cypress Roots Mastich and Galangal of each one dram With a linnen cloth make a bag as big as the belly which being warmed in red Wine or Vinegar may be laid upon the belly Or Take of Wormwood Mints Plantane Oak Leaves and tops of Brambles Horstail and Knot-grass of each one handful Chamomel flowers two pugils red Roses half a handful Myrtles one dram Seeds of Sumach Plantane and Coriander of each six drams Nutmegs three make a Decoction in steeled Water and red Wine for to foment the Belly Rulandus doth apply a bag of Bran boyled in Vinegar If the pain be great apply a linnen cloth wet in steeled Milk that is warm But if Fomentations wil not Cure you may use Waters to sit in called Insessus These are commended by Matthew de Gradi Savanarola and Jachinus who saith that they are a great secret for the Cure of Children for by their actual heat they do drive the Humors somwhat towards the Skin and by their a●●ringent quality stop the flux But you must not use them if the Body be very full of evil Humors or if the Dysentery be malignant and joyned with a Feaver They are made of Oak buds green Cypress Berries green Pine-nuts or Leaves Barks and other such like boyled in Water of the aforesaid Decoctions for Fomentations You may make Fumigations that the Patient may receive the vapor of them through a hollow Chair Especially a Decoction made of Mullein and the Fume thereof received is commended in this Disease and also for a Diarrhoea Faventinus commends a Fumigation made of Turpentine cast upon a hot Iron taken up into the Body twice a day And he commends also this Fomentation Take of Balm one pound Mullein one handful Put them in a long bag boyl it well in red Wine and strong Vinegar and apply it to the Fundament Rulandus useth a Decoction of Acorns in Vinegar for a Fomentation And Faventinus propoundeth this following Lotion as a secret to stop the Dysentery Take of the dross of Iron and filings of Steel both prepared in Vinegar of each one pound then boyl them in two pints of very strong Vinegar to the consumption of half Let the Patient put his fee● and his hands half an hour every morning and evening therein In a long Disease and when there are Ulcers in the Guts Quick-silver is good if it be mixed with Oyntment of Roses and the belly anointed therewith As also the Clysters afore mentioned for filthy Ulcers At the same time you may give Milk and Syrup of Myrtles Also one dram of true Balsom given in a Wafer doth wonderfully heal al inward Ulcers For asswaging pain apply the Caul of a new killed Sheep to the belly and bind it on especially to Children and repeat it often If the Liver Stomach or Brain cause this flux you must use proper Medicines to them alwaies making choice of those that do astringe and strengthen For his ordinary Drink give him Spring Water with Conserve of Roses the Tincture of Roses a Decoction of Oaken Leaves or Water wherein Terra sigillata is infused or wherein red hot Gold hath been quenched with Syrup of Quinces Myrtles or dried Roses Or when there is no Feaver use a weak Decoction of Mastich with the Syrups aforesaid According to Crato's Judgment you must not use any chaly beat or steeled Drink for it doth not astringe as commonly they suppose but troubleth the belly Others commend the Decoction of Gramen or Dogs Tooth because it is good to dry and divert by Urine Lastly 'T is worth the Observation which Aetius speaks Lib. 3. Cap. 8. and Paulus Lib. 1. Cap. 35. that old fluxes are dryed up by Venery Which Hippocrates said formerly 7. Epid in the end Excessive Venery doth cure fluxes of the belly Amatus Lusitanus learned this Truth by Experience Curat 41. Cent 2. One troubled with a Dysentery saith he very violently was married and the first night he lay with his Wife was cured Let this be added for a Conclusion which is related in the Cure of Diarrhoea out of Platerus in his Cure of the flux of the Hemorrhoids Hot Blood of either Man or Beast given in a Clyster doth wonderfully stop and cure the flux Chap. 7. Of Tenesmus TEnesmus is a continual desire to go to stool and voiding of nothing but Slime or bloody Matter The immediate Cause of this Disease is an Ulcer in the streight Gut called Intestinum rectum from which Quittor or filthy Matter continually floweth and stirreth up the expulsive Faculty by which means there is a continual desire of going to stool Moreover there is voided a slimy Matter mixed with blood from the depravation of the Homoiosis or quality that converts things into its likeness of the ulcerated part because it cannot wel concoct its proper Nourishment and make it like it self but turns it into another slimy substance as we shewed more at large in Dysenteries and other Ulcers of the Guts But in regard we said in the Chapter of Dysentery That al the Intestines might be ulcerated in that disease thence it seems to follow That the Ulcers of the straight Gut called Rectum belong to a Dysentery Yet Custom hath so prevailed that when the Rectum is only hurt it is called by the name of Tenesmus And because when other Guts are affected if the Rectum suffer there is also Tenesmus or needing although the disease be then called a Dysentery therefore Dysentery and Tenesmus are of the same Nature and have the same Cause and differ only in respect of the part affected And therefore we need not repeat the Causes because they are the same with those that produce a Dysentery For the Knowledg of this Disease there is no more required but to distinguish it from a Dysentery which you may learn from the definition For in a Tenesmus there is a continual needing but in a Dysentery it is by fits besides in that after great straining there is voided only a little slime bloody or mattery but in a Dysentery both Excrements and Humors are continually voided The Signs of the Causes are the same with a Dysentery As for the Prognostick Celsus Lib.
let the Patient take it twice or thrice in a month The ordinary Pils mentioned in the Cure of the stoppage of the Liver are most excellent to which you may add the Medicines there mentioned of Tartar Vitriol and Steel Zacutus Lusitanus Observ 99. Lib. 2. reports of a certain Woman which had the Green-sickness ten yeers with stoppage of her Terms and could not be cured with divers opening and purging Medicines and some made of Steel that he cured her with nothing but Conserve of Mugwort given thirty daies together drinking after it the distilled Water of Savin in which Rhubarb had been a whol night insused The same Zacutus Observ 117. Lib. 3. tels of a Virgin which eating much Salt every day felinto a Diarrhoea of Choller mixed with a Consumption which he cured after general Medicines with Goats Milk steeled and cold things applied to the Liver In the greatest Obstructions an Issue made in the right or left Legg as the Liver or Spleen is affected is very good After the Obstructions are opened you must diseuss the flegm like serous humors that remain in the Veins and in the habit of the Body by sweats for which you must use the Decoction of Guajacum in cold Constitutions or of China and Sarsa in those that are hot for fifteen or twenty daies with this Caution That every fourth or fifth day you give a Purge to clense the Bowels of Humors which cannot be sent forth by sweat and which if they continue wil grow hard and putrefie and be the occasion of Feavers and other Diseases For this Purpose you may use Brimstone Baths both for drink and bathing for by the drinking thereof when the passages are first open by the Medicines aforesaid the Humor that is contained in the first and second Region of the Body is clensed and sent forth by the belly and urine and the third Region is clensed by sweating in them And lastly Copulation if it may be legally done after the use of opening Medicines is very good for thereby the Natural heat is stirred up in parts Natural by which the Vessels of the Womb are much enlarged And Experience teacheth that somtimes these Women have their Terms the first night after Marriage and that others who in good health have them before their accustomed time Chap. 2. Of the stoppage of the Terms THe Terms are said to be stopped when in a Woman ripe of Age which gives not suck and is not with Child there is a seldom smal or no evacuation of blood by the Womb which used to be every month The cause of this stoppage is either in the Womb or in its Vessels or in the blood which comes or ought to come that way Divers Diseases of the Womb may cause this Disease namely a cold Distemper and dry which thickeneth and bindeth the Body of the Womb or a hot and dry distemper by drying the part or burning up the nourishment thereof from whence come evil humors which being fastened in the part hinder the Terms from flowing Also the Organical Diseases of those parts as inflamation or scirrhus the turning of the inward mouth thereof or compression from the Tumors of the parts adjacent or the Omentum or Caul growing too thick The thickness of the Womb it self Ulcer or Scars which they leave or from the tearing of the Cotyledones or Mouths of the Vessels in a great Abortion The Vessels of the Womb do often suffer Obstruction which is the chief cause of stopping of the Terms and they come from cold and thick Humors somtimes there is a suppression of those Veins by binding of them and that is from the parts adjacent being stretched and swoln as we said in the binding or closing of the Womb. The blood offending either in quantity quality or motion may be cause of the obstruction of the Courses It offends in quantity when it is too much or too little too much when it stretcheth out the Veins so that they cannot contract themselves to expel it as in the bladder when it is too full of Urine it cannot contract it self to send it forth too little when the Body hath not blood enough to nourish it The blood offends in quality when it is thicker and more slimy of its own Nature by reason of the cold distemper of the Liver and other parts or from the mixture of thick and flegmatick or melanchollick humors from whence commonly Obstructions come The blood offends in motion when it passeth other waies as by the Nose vomiting spittle urine hemorrhoids and many other parts I saw a Maid who had a Sore in her head which opened every month and bled plentifully and we have seen many that have sent forth blood at fixed times by their Lungs and this evacuation was instead of a Menstrual flux The external Causes are cold and dry Air Northern winds often going into cold water especially in the time of their flux too little or two much meat either too thick and cold or too astringent also hot things as too much Salt and Spice by drying of the substance of the Liver and other parts and by drying up the blood by which it groweth thick and fit to stop violent exercise and watchings which do consume the blood long sleep and idleness which do weaken the Natural heat and cause Crudities too long retaining of Excrements by usual bleeding at the Nose Hemorrhoids Diarrhoea and other evacuations by vomit urine or sweat and lastly great passions of the mind anger sudden fear sorrow jealousie and the like The Knowledge of this is to be taken from the Patients relation but because it comes either from Natural or Preternatural Causes we shal lay down some distinguishing signs left the Physitian be deceived by Women that would dissemble their being with Child and left he should rashly prescribe Medicines to provoke Terms to Women with Child First If they be with Child they have commonly their Natural Complexion but others are pale and ill colored Secondly The Symptomes which Women with Child have at the first do dayly decrease but in others stoppage of the Terms by how much the longer the Terms stop by so much the more the Symptomes encrease Thirdly In Women with Child after the third Month you may perceive the Scituation and Motion of the Infant by laying your hand upon the inferior Belly in others there is a Tumor to be felt but it is oedematous or flegmatick not hard neither is it proportionable to the Womb. Fourthly If a wise Midwife touch the inward Mouth of the Womb it will not be so close shut as in women with Child but rather hard and contracted and full of pain Fiftly Women with Child are commonly merry and little disturbed but when the Terms are otherwise stopped they are sad and sorrowful The Signs of the Causes are these The faults of the Womb which use to cause stoppage of the Terms shal be laid down in the following Chapters but the greatest
the Patients belly above the Navel be strongly girt with a swath-band that the womb may be thereby reduced and the vapors hindred from ascending Concerning letting blood it is a great question Whether it be convenient in the sit or no For seeing there is at that time a great weakness in the Patient and somtimes despair of life and the body is cooled all over by malignant vapors which infest the Brain and Heart which can no waies be expelled by blood-letting no question the use thereof is very dangerous during the fits And of this Opinion are Varandaeus and Sennertus But Mercatus and Rodericus a Castro do determine contrarily That a Vein ought to be opened in the Patients Ankle or Instep when the Disease springs from an abundance of Menstrual blood retained and that the Patients strength oppressed with the burden the passages obstructed with too much blood and the danger of suffocation hence arising can be remedied by no other means but bleeding seeing in this case neither stinking smels nor sweet smels nor Cupping-Glasses can bring the Patient out of her fit Philippus Hoechstetterus in the second part of his Observations makes it appear by certain Histories that bleeding in the Foot hath done much good Insomuch as a certain Nun which had been speechless and in Convulsion fits for two daies together two hours after she had bled began to speak and to eat and drink Iam of Opinion a Vein may be opened if the Pulse be strong and there be evident tokens that blood doth super-abound But if the Pulse be weak we must forbear and stay till the fit is over for a more convenient season in which blood may be safely taken away Plaisters are profitably applied under the Navel of the Mass of Emplastrum Ceroneum which mollifies and discusseth and so is better than the vulgar Womb-Plaister which doth somwhat bind and therefore may retain the vapors and malignant humors Plaisters are likewise made of Galbanum and Assafoetida or of Caranna and Tacamahaca either alone or with some Spices mingled with them As for Example Take Gum Caranna half an ounce Pouder of Nutmegs and Cloves of each half a dram Oyl of Amber four drops Turpentine two drams Make all into a Plaister Such Plaisters are to be in fashion of a Shield or Scutcheon and in the pointed part of the Plaister which must be laid towards the Water-gate some of Musk or Civet are to be put that they may send forth a sweet smell and thereby allure the Womb back again Three grains of Musk may be put in a little Cotton moistened with Oyl and thrust into the hole of the Navel then lay on a sinal Plaister of dissolved Galbanum This some Women for a Secret Or four grains of Camphire may be dissolved in Oyl of sweet Almonds and put into the Navel and a Diapalma Plaister laid over it If the Disease seem to be fostered by plenty of wind and vapors Fomentations and Baths will be good of the Decoction of Rue Mugwort Time and Calaminth Fennel seed Annis seed Cummin seed Bay-berries Chamomel Flowers Dill flowers c. Also little bags may be prepared with Cummin seed Annis seed Carrot seed Salt Rue Bran in them and applied very hot and often renewed Or Take Oyl of Rue four ounces Spirit of Turpentine half an ounce Mingle them and dip therein a piece of Bread hot out of the Oven and lay it upon the Navel Also it will be good to anoint the lower part of the belly the Region of the womb Share and Loyns because such anointings do dilate the Passages attenuate the Vapors and discuss them They may be made of Nard Oyl Spike Oyl Oyl of Dill Sesamine Saffron Lillies and Sweet Almonds Authors do very much commend a fume of the warts which grow upon Horses Legs which being dried in an Oven and beaten to Pouder they are burnt under the Noses of women in these fits as a present Remedy whereby women are wont to be in an instant delivered of their fits to the admiration of the by-standers If the Disease spring from Retention of Seed nothing is better than carnal Conjunction as soon as the Patient is out of her fit if she be married Instead of carnal Conjunction where that cannot he had many advise that the Patient be rubbed and tickled by a Midwife in the Neck of her womb into which the Midwife must put her fingers anointed with Oyls of Spices that so the offensive Sperm may be voided But seeing that cannot be done without wickedness understand by a silly superstitious Papist that counts it a meritorious good work to burn Mother and Child in her womb alive as at Jersey and a wickedness to free a sick body of a little offensive humor a Christian Physitian must never prescribe the same To Discuss those malignant Vapors which cause the womb-fit many Medicines are wont to be given down the Throat among which is a dram of old Venice Treacle with water of Mugwort Penyroyal and Balme Troches of myrrh to the quantity of two scruples or Oyl of Amber to five or six drops with the said Liquors Pills are frequently used the best are made after this manner Take Castorium Myrrh Assa-foetida of each one scruple faecula Brioniae half a scruple seeds of Rue and Saffron of each seven grains with Syrup of Mugwo●t make twelve pills Let her take three or four if she cannot swallow them let them be dissolved in Water of Mugwort These following Pills are good in a violent fit which they are wont to remedy without fail Take Assafaetida one scruple Castoreum six grains Laudanum three grains make all into three or four Pills Let her take them presently Pilulae Faetidae majores although they be purging yet are they given to good purpose in the Fit to half a dram For they gently evacuate and are not wont to work till the fit be over so that there is no danger in their working Also many waters are wont to be given in the fit viz. Aqua vitae Cinnamon water or Treacle water Or a specifical water may be made after this manner Take Zedoary roots Carrot seeds Lovage roots of each two ounces red Myrrh Castoreum of each half an ounce Piony roots four ounces Misleto of the Oak gathered at the wain of the Moon three ounces powr upon all these being prepared four pints and an half of Feaver-fewwater Spirit of Wine half a pint let them digest three daies and afterward still them The dose is a spoonful by it self or with some other convenient liquor A more easie water to make more pleasant to taste and no less effectual is this following Take of the juyces of Bawm and Borrage clarified of each two pints the best Saffron one dram Let them be infused and distilled in Balneo The Dose is a spoonful with Broth. This following potion is vulgarly used Take of Cinnamon Water half an ounce Turnep Water four ounces Castoreum four grains Make all into
a potion or draught Oyl of Amber given to three or four drops in Orenge-flower-water or some other specifical doth quickly rid away the womb-fit The following potion is wont to do very much good as it is to be seen in our observations Take Water of Mugwort Roses and Orenge-flowers of each one ounce ●●nnamon Water three drams Conjection of Hyacinth stone one dram Diamargaritum frigidum that is the cooler perled pouder half a scruple Saffron four grains Make them all into a potion Orange flower water doth good alone given three or four ounces but mingled with Musk and Dragons blood it doth wonders witness Solenander in these words A certain Woman was vexed with ●nost cruel Symptoms Head-ach Belchings contraction of the Body pain ●●her Groin grinding of her Teeth somtimes falling to the ground speechless with her mouth shut so as she could not open it and all this through disorder of her Womb. Many remedies being used in vain a certain old Woman comes and gives her thirteen grains of Musk and as many of common Dragons blood in four ounces of Orenge-flower Water she was cured and never felt the like griefs any more I have in the like case given the same Medicine divers times and alwaies with good effect An Elks Claw is also very good in these fits according to the experiment of Appollonius Menabeus in his Treatise of the Elk Chap. 10 in these words I confess I have both heard from others and found by my own Experience that an Elks Claw is a present remedy for the Suffocation of the Mother For being called to help a Woman in those Fits I gave her the raspings of the Elks Claw with Zedoary with which and with other remedies administred according to the rule of Art I did the Cure with Honor. And when I understood that she was wont to be troubled with those Fits oftentimes I injoyned her to wear a piece of Elks Claw continually about her Neck Which when she diligently observed for the space of three months that I was in the place she was ever free from those Fits and gave me often times thanks for my advice Camphire fired and cast into the water and there abiding till it be quenched is an excellent Remedy given to the quantity of a dram The Cats-tails of the walnut in the Epistles collected by Laurence Scholtzius in the Letter written from Thomas Mouset to Peter Monavius are extolled with this Commedation In Srangulation of the Womb the Cats-tails of the Walnut tree are a singular Medicine being dryed and poudered You may give two scruples with two drops of Oyl of Amber I never knew any thing more excellent in that Disease Two most excellent Remedies may be made in the form of Pouders which I have oftentimes tried The one is of the After-birth of a woman that lies in of her first Child dried in the Chimney and beaten to pouder The Dose is a dram in some convenient liquor It presently takes away the fit The other is made of two parts of Brimstone and one of Nutmeg Pouder them and give a dram Pouder of Jeat given to half a dram or one dram will do much The Pouder of Elder-berries of Quercetanus taken a dram in Wine cures the Eplilepsie or Falling-sickness by consent of the Womb and being taken the second time makes that the fits return not Where that Pouder cannot be had the same quantity of Soot from the Chimney may be given in an Egg soft boiled And because the Womb is oftentimes filled with evil and Excrementious Humors from whence ugly Vapors are raised up we must be careful to purge the same which may be most conveniently done by this following Pessarie Take Diaphoenicon one dram pouder of Hiera picra half a dram Turpentine three drams mix all and with Tow make a Pessary For her ordinary drink let the Patient drink a thin weak Decoction of Cinnamon Caraway or Annis seeds Touching Wine It is a question whether it may be given a Woman in these fits Hippocrates in his first Book of the Nature of Women seems to commend the same and there is much reason to back his opinion For an extream refrigeration of the Body and Languishment of natural strength cannot be better holpen than by giving the Patient a Cup of rich Canary But Avicenna wholly forbids it And indeed Because this Disease depends for the most part upon Seed retained or of Blood and foul Vapors carried up from the Womb Wine by it's thinness and exceeding piercing faculty doth more exagitate and vex the morbifical matter Whence we see by common Experience that Women troubled with this Disease are worse if Wine be given in their fits To Compose this Contention we say that Wine ordinarily is not to be given during the fit but upon extraordinary occasion Namely when the Patients strength is extreamly decai'd she hath Swooning fits joyned with the Mother fits or seems to be at the last gasp all other Remedies tried in vain we make use of Wine as our last Refuge and present help In this Cure we must be very careful if the Patient be with Child and prudent in our administration of Medicaments neither must we use those more vehement and stinking ones least we cause miscarriage and we must perform the Cure rather by outward than inward Medicaments In the Course of the Cure care must be taken of the Heart and Brain and if they seem much oppressed they must be releived by such Medicines as are proper unto them To the Heart Wine and Orange-flower-water or Imperial water or Treacle of Andromachus dissolved in Wine must be applied by wetting things therein and laying them upon the Region thereof or hot living Creatures are to be applied thereunto For to strengthen the Head those Remedies must be used which are set down in our Chapter of sleepy Diseases When the fit is over Care must be taken to prevent the return thereof either wholly or at least for a long time which is done by a removal of the Causes and by strengthening the Womb. In the first place therefore at a convenient season but especially in the Spring and Fall the Patient must be yeerly evacuated beginning with a purging Potion or some other Medicament suitable to the nature of the Patient alwaies adding Hysterical things And then If Blood seem superfluous it must be drawn first out of the Arm and then out of the Foot choosing as neer as possibly the middle space between the Patients monthly purgations Afterwards That the redundancy of evil Humors may be sufficiently prepared and purged out an Apozeme must be compounded altering opening and purging to be given at four or five times If Nature seem to incline to the opening of the Hemorrhoids they must be opened by application of Leeches And Mercatus doth witness in his 13. and 14. Counsel that they have much profited in these fits After general purgation to discuss the remainders of the morbifical matter a sweating Decoction will
Child a Mole or an After-birth for then according to Galen in his Third Book of Natural Faculties the same thing betides the womb which is wont to happen to two wrastlers who endeavor to throw one the other upon the ground till both fall together Hereunto add frequent setting of Cupping-Glasses upon the Thighs and very vehement agitation of Body or of Mind Relaxation or slackening of the Ligaments is caused likewise by divers causes as by a long-lasting Catarth divers Crudities which are cast out into the womb as the sink of the whol Body Whence it is that women long troubled with the Whites can scarce avoid this Disease especially elderly women which are most of all troubled therewith Add hereunto external causes as over-frequent bathing especially in cold water Southern and moist Air especially being received into the womb after Child birth moist Diet much drinking Idleness long sleep and all other causes which may decrease flegm and cause its flux into the womb The Signs whereby to know this Disease are evident to the sence For the womb is found sticking in the Water-gate like an Hens or Gooses Egg or like a Clew of Thrid with the perceivance of a weight pressing upon the Water-Gate when the Patient stands upright And while they sit or go to stool a vehement pain is felt about the privy Parts and the Region of O sacrum or the Hanch-bone If it hang far out the greater pain and heat is felt the urine comes away by little and little and makes the womb smart as it passeth The Causes procuring this Falling-down of the womb may be thus distinguished If it proceed from loosness or slackness of the Ligaments it comes by little and little hath the less pain and white Purgations have preceded or other Causes moistening the womb and relaxing the Ligaments thereof But if it proceed from a breaking of the Ligaments the pain is more vehement and blood somtimes breaks forth and such Causes have preceded which have been able to break with violence the Ligaments As for the Prognosticks belonging to this Disease The Disease of it self is not dangerous yet is it very unhandsom and troublesom hindering the Patient from freedom to go and walk at will also from Conception and convenient expurgation of her Courses Yet may it somtimes occasion death if pains Feavers convulsions or other grievous Symptomes be joyned therewith Also the womb in this Case is somtimes corrupted through distemper of the Air or by violent impulsion and becomes Gangraenated which necessitates it to be cut off The Disease being fresh and the womb coming not far out is more easily cured than when it is an old Infirmity and the womb comes far out In yonger women the womb is more easily restored to its place than in Elderly women Falling down of the womb by reason of the Ligaments being broken is incurable To come to the Cure The womb is to be thrust back into its Natural place and to be detained there and the fault of its Bands or Ligaments must be corrected If they be broken by things that do glue and sodder together if they be relaxed or slackened with things drying aftringent and strengthening All which may be done by the following Medicaments In the first place therefore That the womb may more easily be restored to its place the Guts and Bladder must be disburdened left pressing the Neck of the womb they should hinder its reduction forasmuch as the neck of the womb rests upon the streight Gut and the bladder rests upon the neck of the womb VVhen the Gutts and Bladder are discharged of their Excrements let the woman lie along upon her Back with her thighs wide asunder and her knees drawn upwards and let her with her hands thrust her womb inwards and force it still upwards into the neck so as to turn it inwards as it goes till all is returned within the cavity of the Belly which should contain the womb Or if she is not able to do it her self let her do it by help of the midwife or use a thick blunt ended stick with Cloaths wrapt about it by which it may be forced further into the Cavity of the Belly than is possible by the hands to drive it Or for fear of hurting her Body a Pessary may be made of Linnen Cloth often doubled and rowled together with a string tied fast thereunto and accommodated to this service of thrusting up of the womb But if the womb fallen from its place shall swell so that it cannot enter into the cavity of the Belly the swelling must in the first place be removed And if there be an inflamation such things must be applyed as are sit to heal the same If otherwise it be blown up such things must be used as will discuss the inflation Rodericus a Castro washes the swollen womb with a Decoction of Beets and then sprinkles it with vineger and salt and so when the swelling is aborted he reduceth the same The same Rodericus a Castro writes that it is very good towards restoring the fallen womb for a Physitian or a Chyrurgion to come with burning red hot Iron in his hand and to make as if he would thrust it into the womb by that means nature contracts her self and the womb with her and any other part that sticks out of the Body For he relates that a certain very expert Chyrurgion did by this stratagem force Back a mans Gutts that were ready to come out at a wound in his belly when other remedies did no good For holding a great red hot Iron in his hand the Patient looking on he made as if he would Clap it upon the wound VVith the sudden fright whereof the Gutts were presently drawn back into their place Avenzoar in his Second Theizir Tract 5 Chap. 4. Propounds some such thing as this When this disease saith he begins first to appear the Physitian may gently cure the same And it is reduced all these wayes viz. by your hand If you please and if not make her he on her Back and let some Body sit upon her brest and another upon her thighes and then cause her to be frighted putting some creeping Vermin upon her Leggs such as Mice Efts frogs and such like by which let her be so frighred as to endeavour to get away by drawing her Leggs and thighs up to her whereby all her Members and her whol Body may at once be contracted by which meanes the Womb will return unto its own place Zacutus Lusitanus following Avenzoar relates the following story in the 66 observation of his Second Book Coming to a woman saies he Which had her Womb fallen down the space of a year an half with extream hardness it seemed very hard by reason of its stretching out to be reduced to its place especially seeing Avenzoar saies that this work must be done before the Womb be grown hard I devised many remedies for this disease astringent Insessions Pessaries
require Hence Four Impediments of Conception do arise viz. If the woman receive not the Seed If she retain it not If she preserve and cherish it not If she nourish it not so as it encrease and grow Reception of the Seed is hindered by many Causes by things Natural things not Natural and by things Preternatural Among things Natural hindering the Reception of the Sperm in the first place is recko●ed yongness of Age in which by reason of the smalness and straitness of the Genital Parts the woman cannot receive the mans yard or not without very great pain which makes her worse for Genial Embracements The same effect is caused by over great Age seeing that in elderly Virgins the Genital Parts through want of being exercised in actions tending to Generation do become withered flap and flaggy and so strait that they cannot afterwards easily ●dmit a mans Yard Likewise all such as are naturally lame with distorted Legs and their Crupper-bone depressed can hardly put themselves into such a convenient posture during the genial Embracement as a necessary that the Seed may be duly and rightly received Hereunto add over great fatness which straitens the Passages of the womb and by greatness of the Belly hinders the right and fit Conjunction of the man with the woman And lastly a cold distemper of the womb makes women dull and listless so that they enjoy no pleasure to speak of in the Genial Embracement or it is long before they are provoked with desire so that the inner Orifice of the Womb is not timely enough opened to receive the Mans Sperm Among things not Natural Passions of the Mind hold the first rank and especially hatred between Man and VVife by means whereof the VVoman being averse from this kind of pleasure gives not flown sufficient quantity of Spirits wherewith her Genitals ought to swel at the instant of Generation that her womb skipping as it were for joy may meet her Husbands Sperm graciously and freely receive the same and draw it into its innermost Cavity or Closet and withal bedew and sprinkle it with her own Sperm powred forth in that pang of Pleasure that so by the commixture of both Conception may arise The things Preternatural which can hinder the Reception of Seed are certain Diseases incident to the Genital Parts or to such as border neer upon them as Tumors Ulcers Obstructions Astrictions Shuttings up Distorsions Stone in the Bladder and other such like The Second fault in Women which hinders Conception viz. When the Seed is not retained depends either upon the over great moisture of the Womb namely when the womb is filled with many excrementitious Humors by which becoming looser and more flaggy than is fit it doth not rightly purse and contract it self together so as to retain the Sperm or the Orifice of the Womb is so slack that it cannot rightly contract it self to keep in the Seed which chiefly is caused by Abortion or hard Labor in Child-birth whereby the fibres of the Womb are broken in pieces one from another and they and the inner Orifice of the Womb over much slackened And that same immoderate moisture may arise both from the proper Constitution of the woman and from external causes of moisture such as Baths Idleness moist Diet and especially from the Whites which flux of Whites happens very frequently since the Womb is as it were the Common-shore whereinto all the parts of the Body do discharge their Superfluities so that this is wont to be the most frequent and ordinary Cause of Barrenness The Third Cause hindering Conception viz. When the Sperm is not sufficiently nourished in the Womb depends upon such things as are apt to corrupt the Seed as every distemper of the womb namely a cold distemper which extinguisheth the Seed an hot distemper which dissipates the Spirits a moist distemper which robs the Seed of its due thickness and a dry distemper consumes and drinks up the Seed and thus the Seed being by these distempers corrupted and degraded from its natural Constitution becomes unfit for Conception To these Causes Authors do add Witchcrafts and Charms by which all confess that Conception may be hindered Likewise external things as Meats and Poysons may do as much such as are reckoned up by Authors viz. Among Meats Vinegar Mint Water-Cresses Beans and such like and among Poysons or at least such things as have a certain venemous property causing Barrenness The Agate or Jet ●he Matrix of a Goat or Mule Glow-worms Sapphires Smaragds and the like And lastly Malignant and venemous Diseases may exceedingly corrupt the Seed and render it unfit for Generation as the Consumption Leprous Infections Whores-Pox stinking and cancerated Ulcers The Fourth and last Cause of Barrenness viz. When the woman doth not yield convenient matter to form the Conception and to augment the same depends upon a want of Seed and Menstrual blood so over yong women and over old do not conceive through want of both those Materials The Age of a woman fit for to conceive is commonly determined to be from the fourteenth to the fiftieth yeer of her Age. Yea and though those foresaid Materials are not wanting if yet they are ill disposed they are not fit for Generation And they may be ill disposed through divers distempers and other Diseases likewise by reason of bad Diet producing none of the best blood So women which gorge themselves with much raw fruit and cold smal drink breed wheyish blood unfit for Generation Yet we must needs confess that some women have conceived who never had their Courses as may be collected out of the Observations of divers Authors yet so much Menstrual blood was collected in those women as useth to remain over and above in such as have their Courses though they had not so much as to cause their monthly Courses To the Causes hitherto mustered up must be added a certain disproportion or unsutableness between the Mans Sperm and the Womans which makes they cannot be rightly mingled nor conspire to the Joynt-making up of an Embrion or Rudimental Infant though there be in the mean while no sensible defect either in the Man or Wife And it somtimes happens that the same man can have a child by another woman and the same woman by another man whereas they have lived together in the married estate barren It comes likewise to pass That a woman shall live with a man for ten or more yeers together and not conceive child and afterward shall begin to conceive and bring forth the Cause of which accident is The change of Temperature caused by yeers whereby the Seed comes to have another temper so that being before disproportioned to the mans Seed it comes by change of Age to be fitly proportioned thereunto Now this disproportion of Seeds consists chiefly herein When men much exceeding in some quality belonging to their temper are joyned with women which partake of the self same excess viz. When over hot men
nourish the Infant in the Womb. Or if it be an acute Disease without a Feaver as the Falling-sickness Apoplexy Universal Convulsion of the whol Body the Mother and Infant cannot withstand the violence of the Disease neither can they bear such strong Medicines as are requisite to the Cure of those Diseases Yet we must know that this Prognostick is not perpetually true For we know by the Testimonies and Examples in Authors and by dayly Experience that many women with Child having acute Diseases escape with their lives But Chronical or lingering Diseases as Intermitting Agues Catarrhs Tenesmus c. do threaten Abortion and if they cause it not they can hardly be cured before the woman be brought to bed but do keep her company till she lie down Diseases Acute and Chronical in the first and last months are more dangerous than in the intermediate months For in the first months the bands wherewith the Infant is fastened to the Womb are weak so as they may easily be broken and the tender Infant is more easily over pressed with those preternatural Causes But in the last months namely the sixth seventh and eighth the Child being grown greater requires much nourishment which in these Diseases it is deprived of Also the foresaid bands do not stick so fast as in the third fourth and fifth months in which there is less danger of Abortion Therefore Galen doth excellently compare the Child in the Womb to Fruits hanging on a Tree which upon their first growing out have very tender stalks so that they may be easily shaken off with the wind or any other violent commotion and when they are neer ripe they hang not so fast upon the bough as in the intermediate spaces they did Likewise the Cure of the foresaid Diseases in women with child doth remarkably differ as touching their Diet and those two grand Remedies Blood-letting and purging whereunto we may ad Medicaments which evacuate by other waies viz. Such as move the Courie Piss-drivers and Sweat-drivers because it is feared lest by these evacuations abortion may be caused of these therefore we shall only treat at present referring what else belongs to the Cure of these Diseases to the proper Chapters where such respective Diseases are handled As for Matter of Diet it is not to women with Child in Acute Diseases to be enjoyned so spare lest the little Infant be famished neither is it to be allowed so liberal that the Feaver should be thereby strengthened but we must steer a middle course with this Caution That in the first months of their Belly-burden a thin Diet be enjoyned and in the latter somwhat more solid and plentiful because the Child doth then stand in need of more nourishment Yet if there must needs be some error in Diet it is better to err in keeping too full than too slender diet for recovery is chiefly to be expected from the strength of the Mother and the Child Touching bleeding that Aphorism of Hippocrates viz. the 31. of Sect. 5. is presently brought in opposition where he saies If a woman with child be let blood she miscarries especially if the child be grown And Galen renders the Reason in his Comment Because the Blood being let out the Infant wants its nourishment whence follows Abortion On the other side daily Experience shews That in very many Diseases of big-bellyed women especially acute diseases as the Pleurisie Inflamation of the Lungs continual Feavers and such like blood-letting is necessary and may be administred not only in the first but also in the middle months and somtimes in the last months of a womans Belly-bearing Which if it be omitted both Mother and Child are in great danger of death And to this latter Opinion the elder Physitians assent not dissenting from the Mind of Galen and Hippocrates by so doing For therefore it is they held a woman would miscarry if being with Child she were let blood because blood being taken away the Child would want its Nourishment So that if blood may so be taken away as that the Infant shall not want its nourishment there wil be no danger of Abortion thereby Now so the case may stand As first In the first Months of a Womans Belly-bearing while the Infant in the womb is little and wants but little Nourishment for then its Nourishment by bleeding will not be drawn away especially if certain signs of superfluity of blood be apparent in the Mother So that from the first month to the fift blood-letting may be safely practised But in the middle and last Months greater circumspection is to be used because the Child being greater and wanting more Nourishment cannot so safely admit of Phlebotomy Howbeit if the Woman abound with blood and a smal quantity be taken away she may safely be let blood because hereby the Disease will be allaied neither wil so much Nutriment be there by withdrawn from the Child as to cause Abortion But if it seem that Hippocrates thought otherwise let us consider that we let blood after a far other fashion than the Antients did they let blood by pounds and we by ounces The very truth is there is no better way to preserve women from Abortion than by blood-letting when it springs from overmuch blood strangling the Infant and overwhelming the same in such women as have been accustomed out of their time of being with child to have a plentiful flux of Courses for divers daies together Thus Petrus Salius Diversus in the 22. Chapter of his Book of particular Diseases I for my part protest quoth he that I have preserved many women from Abortion which they had often suffered only by letting them blood in the first months of their being big Neither would I have it thought that no other kind of blood-letting may be practised in childing women save that which is sparing or moderate For somtimes plentiful bleeding in the last month hath done very much good And I have somtimes experienced this plentiful Blood-letting in the last month when the women with Child were afflicted with a burning Feaver and were full of Blood hoping thereby an abatement of the Feaver and an hastening of the Birth both which I obtain'd by blood-letting and saved both child and mother in danger of death by this only Remedy Which being in some Patients omitted and neglected by Physitians minding more the words of Hippocrates than the matter it self hath been the cause that both child and mother hath miserably perished being strangled by the plenty and fer vency of blood So far Salius Amatus Lusitanus in the 57. Cure of his I. Section let a woman with child of eighteen yeers of age blood in the sixth month four times with happy succe she being in a burning Feaver And Rodericus a Castro in his third Book of Womens Diseaeases Chap. 21. writes that he let a woman of Lisbon blood who had a Pleurisie in the eight month and was given over for desperate by other Physitians four
over wanton venereal embraces And in a word vehement motions of the Armes by drawing somewhat violently to a Body by turning a wheel or doing some such work may exceedingly further Abortion or Miscarriage The Signs of present Abortion are manifest of themselves But such as go before Abortion and prognosticate the same are these An unusual heaviness of the Loyns and Hips a loathness to stir Appetite gone shivering and shaking coming by fits pain of the head especially about the Roots of the Eyes a straitening of the sides and of the Belly above the Navel the flagging or falling and extenuation of the Dugs which made Hippocrates to say in Aphor. 37. Sect. 5. If the Dugs of a woman with child do suddenly grow small that woman will miscarry For the extenuation of a womans Dugs in such a case doth signifie want of blood in those Veins which are common to the womb and to the Dugs by means of which defect the child is in danger to miscarry But if Abortion shall be caused by some external essicient causing violent agitation of the Child in the Womb and a bursting of the Vessels with a pain raised in those parts the Spirits and Blood run speedily to the genital parts of which the Dugs being destitute grow smaller than they were Furthermore Plenty of Milk dropping from the Dugs doth argue weak Child and consequently portends Abortion according to Hippocrates in Aphor. 52. Sect. 5. But if frequent pains a●d almost continual do torment the Reins and Loyns reaching towards the Share as far as Os sacrum with a certain endeavor of going out of the Womb it is a certain sign of a woman that will shortly mscarry For those parts do signifie that the Membranes and L●gaments wherewith the child is fastened to the womb are stretched and torn in ●under And if so be that pure Blood or such as is wheyish or water flowing from the Womb do ●ollow the foresaid pains and endeavors of coming out it shews that Abortion is hard at hand and that the Vessels and Membranes of the Womb are broken and the mouth of the Womb open At the same time the cituation or posture of the Child is changed for whereas it lay high and possessed the middle of the Womans Belly like a Sugar-loof bearing out it is now gathered round like a Foot-ball and roiled down towards the Water gate Also oftentimes there follow grievous Symptomes as shiverings tremblings Palpitations of the Heart Swoonings and abundant Bleeding Hereunto may be added what Hip●oc●a●es teacheth us in the second Book of Popular Sicknesses Text 17. That if after violent external c●uses such as are blow a fall and such like vehement pain and perturbation arise in a Woman with Child she suddenly or at most the same day miscarries but if the external cause were weak the Abortion may be differred till the third day which being once over there is no longer danger of Abortion because such wounds and hurts are wont to grow well again upon the third or at most the fourth day or very much to be mitigated and asswaged whereupon the Child is again confirmed in the Womb and retained Which Precept is of great moment in the Practice o● Phy●ick that women with child being hurt by some external accident should keep their bed for ●nree daies or longer and use such Remedies as prevent Abortion The Prognosticks o● Abortion may be divers after this manner Women are more endangered by Abortion than by due and timely Child-birth because it is more violent and unseasonable for as in ripe Fruit the Stalks are loosened from the Boughs and the Fruit falls of it self so in a Natural Birth the Vessels and Ligaments wherewith the Child is tied to the Womb are loosened and untied as it were of their own accord which in case of Abortion must needs be violently broken asunder Very many women become Barren by their Miscarriages by reason of those exceeding rendings tearing which do wholly overthrow the dispositions of the Womb. Much bleeding accompanied with fainting raving and convulsions is wont to cause death and Aresaeus testifies he never saw any escape who in the time of their Abortion or aiterwards had Convulsion fits In●lamation of the Womb caused by Abortion is for the most part deadly for Blood flowing to the Womb in great quantity is not purged out but putrefies therein and regurgitat●s or slows back into the upper parts whence arise burning Feavers pantings of the Heart Heart-burning and other Symptomes enumerated before Abortion is more dangerous in a woman that never bore Child before because being unaccustomed to Pains and having those Passages more strait she is longer and more vehemently tormented Women very lean or very fat are more endangered by Miscarriage the former because of their weakness the latter because of the narrowness of those Passages by which the Child must come forth Abortion is more dangerous in the sixth seventh and eight months because the Child being the greater is excluded with the more pain and difficulty Women which have a more loose and moist womb than ordinary domiscarry commonly without danger especially in the first month because those parts in such women do easily give way whence their pain and trouble is the less Hippocrates in the second Book of Popular Sicknesses affirms That to miscarry of a male Conception of three-score daies old helps a Woman whose Courses are stopped By stopping of Courses he understands only their imminution when women are not sufficiently or conveniently purged at their monthly seasons for by such an Abortion or Miscarriage as aforesaid those stopped passages are opened and the Blood is drawn towards the womb which came thither but slowly in former times Our ordinary women seem to have taken notice of the truth of this saying of Hippocrates who touching an Abortion of a few months are wont to say by way of proverb Amiscarrying woman is half with child again The Cure of Abortion consists in Preservation for that which is past cannot be helped But all the Symptomes which follow Abortion are the same which accompany women duly brought to bed The Preservation from Abortion hath two principal Points or Heads The one concerns the woman before she is with child The other when she is with child Before the woman is with child all evil dispositions of body which are wont to cause Abortion must be removed as fulness of blood badness of Humors and peculiar Diseases of the womb viz. Distempers Swellings Ulcers and such like Fulness of Blood opens the Veins of the womb or strangles the Infant while it is in the womb This if it be a pure and simple Plenitude may be cured by Blood-letting such as shall answer the quantity of blood super-abounding But badness of Humors is either chollerick and sharp so as to open the Orisices of the Veins or by provoking Nature to stir up the expulsive faculty whereby the child comes to be expelled with those evil humors or by
and keep her self as quiet as possibly she can both in her Body and Mind also to abstain from Genial Embracements which do vehemently towze and disquiet the Womb. For while the Womb opens it self to comprehend the Mans Sperm with which it is exceedingly delighted it drives forwards the lately conceived Child not yet throughly fastened in the womb But if notwithstanding the Medicines aforesaid by reason of the vehemency of the Cause whether it be internal or external the Patient be ready to Miscarry we must apply our selves to do the best we can with these following Remedies And in the first place so soon as pains and throws shall be perceived in the lower part of the Patients Belly towards her Share in her Loyns and about the Ossacrum we must seek to allay and stop them both by things given in and outwardly applied according to the variety of Causes For if Abortion be provoked by Crudities and Winds which is most usual when it begins from an Internal Cause a Pouder must be given compounded of Aromaticum Rosatum and Coriander Seeds Yea we may give of the Aqua Imperialis if the quantity of flegm and wind be very great At the same time let Carminative or Fart-forcing Medicaments be applied below the Patients Navel such are bags of Annis seed Fennel seed Foenugreek seed Flowers of Chamomel Elder Rosemary and Stoechados mingled together Or a Rose Cake fried in a Pan with rich Canary and sprinkled with Pouder of Nutmeg and Coriander or the Caul of a Wether newly killed or his Lungs laid on warm If with these means the pains cease not let a Clyster be cast in made of Wine and Oyl wherein two drams of Philonium Romanum may be dissolved or Narcoticks may be given inwardly in a smaller Dose to allay the violence of Humors and Winds as we are wont to do in pains of the Chollick But if by reason of contumacious pains that will not be asswaged or of the violence of some external cause blood begin to come away Revelling Medicines are to be applied to withdraw the course of the blood from the Womb such are Rubbings of the uper parts and painful bindings also Cupping-Glasses fastened to the Shoulder-blades under the Dugs and under the short Ribs on both sides Yea and if the Woman be ful of Blood it will not be amiss to take some blood from her both when she begins to void blood and especially before it begins to come and the blood must be taken away at several times a little at once And if all this will not suffice but the Flux of blood continues we must proceed to astringent and thickening Diet and Medicaments and so the Pouders and Electuaries formerly described may be administred Also Juyce of Plantane new drawn and Syrup of Poppies to the quantity of an ounce with Pouder of Bole-Armoniack or Dragons-blood Also outwardly may be used fomentations binding and strengthening made of Pomegranate peels Cyprèss Nuts Acorn Cups Balaustians Grape-stones and such like things boyled in Smiths water and red Wine Or a little Bag full of red Rose Leaves and Balaustians may be boyled and applied hot to the Patients Belly Hereunto may be added the foresaid Plaisters and Cerecloaths Or for to cause the more astriction make a Cataplasm of astringent Pouders with Turpentine and the whites of Eggs which must be spread upon Tow or course Flax and applied to the Navel and the Reins warm The Tow which shall be applied to the Navel must be moistened with Wine that which is to be applied to the Kidneys in Vinegar The two following Medicaments are accounted for Secrets and it is beleeved they will certainly hold the Child in the Womb if they be used before it be loosened from the Wombs Vessels Take twelve Leaves of Gold Spodium a dram the Cocks Treading of three Eggs that are not adle Mix all very well till the Gold be broken into smal Atomes Afterwards dissolve them in a draught of white Wine and give it to drink three mornings together At the same time let the following Cataplasm be laid on Take male Frankincense poudered two ounces five whites of Eggs Let them be stirred about together over hot coals alwaies stirring them that they may not clodder together add Turpentine to make them stick Then spread it upon Parcels of Tow which lay upon her Navel as hot as she can possibly endure them twice a day morning and evening on the three daies aforesaid Chap. 18. Of Hard Child-birth HArd Travel in Child-bearing is such as keeps not the due and ordinary Laws of Nature taking up longer time than ordinary and accompanied with more vehement pains than are usual and other more grievous Symptomes Divers causes here of may be assigned both internal and external The internal depend either of the Mother of the Womb or of the Child In respect of the Mother Travel with child may become sore and hard by the weakness of her Body either Natural or in regard of Age as in very yong and very ancient women or in regard of Diseases wherewith the woman was troubled during the time of her going with Child or is still troubled Hereunto also Leanness and over great driness of the whol body may be added as also over fatness and grossness compressing and straitening the passages of the womb ill shape of such bones as border upon and embrace the womb as in such as limp wind stretching the Guts stone or preternatural tumor possessing the bladder and pressing the Womb and the ill constitution of the Lungs and other parts serving for Respiration because holding the Breath is very necessary to exclude the Child In respect of the Womb divers Diseases thereof may cause a sore Labor as Swellings Ulcers Obstructions Astrictions Stoppages arising from preternatural Causes In respect of the Child Hard Travel is caused when there is some fault therein in respect of its substance its quantity its figure and certain things thereunto belonging The Child is faulty in regard of Substance when it is dead or putrefied or some waies infected or weakened with some Disease so that it hath no ability to contribute to its own exclusion In regard of Quantity likewise the Child doth not further it s own Birth which is either discrete or severed quantity or concrete and joyned the former is called Number the latter Magnitude In regard therefore of continued quantity the child is faulty if the Body or Head of it be over great which makes the Birth thereof become difficult and laborsom in regard of the disjoyned quantity of the child or burden Labor becomes difficult as when there are more than one in the womb so the Birth of Twins is more painful than of a single Child for the most part In respect of the Figure or Scituation of the Child in the Womb difficult Travel happens many waies as when the Child endeavors to come forth with its feet or its hands foremost or puts out one hand only or
one foot or when it endeavors to come forth doubled with its breech or its belly foremost In regard of the Childs Adjuncts or certain things belonging to the Child difficulty of Travail happens when those membranes which enclose the Child are more thin than ordinary so that they come to break sooner than they should whence followed an over quick effusion of the waters conteined therein whereupon the mouth of the Womb remaines dry at the time of the exclusion of the Infant or where the foresaid Membranes are more thick and compact than ordinary by which means the Child is hardly able to breake them External Causes depend upon things necessary and things contingent the things necessary are such as Physitians commonly call res non naturales things not natural So a cold and dry air and the Northern-wind are very hurtfull to women in travail because they straiten the whol Body drive the Blood and spirits inwards and prove very destructive to the Infant coming forth of so warm a place as the Womb. Also air more hot than ordinary dissipates the spirits and exhausts the strength both of Mother and Child easily introduceing a feaverish Inflammation into a Body replenished with ill humors and exagitated Meates raw and hard to digest or of an astringent quality taken in a large Quantity before the time of travail may render the same laborious the stomach being weakened and the common passages stopped which in this case ought to be very free and open Sleepyness and Sottishess do slacken the endeavours both of the Mother and the Child and shew nature to be weak Unseasonable stirring of the woman doth much delay the Birth of the Child whenas she refuses to stand to walk lie down or to sit upon the Midwifes stoole as need shall require or when she is unduely agitated to and fro whence it comes to pass that the Child cannot l●●ue in a sitting posture or looses the good posture it had by reason of the Mothers undue and disorderly moveing her self The retention of Excrements at the time of Travail as of Urin distending the Bladder of hard excrements in the streight Gutt and hemorrhoids much Swelled do straiten the neck of the Womb and divert nature from her endeavour of expelling the Child And in a word vehement Passions of mind as Fear Sadness Anger may very much encrease the difficulty of Child birth To things contingent are referred Blowes Falls wounds which may very much hinder the Birth hereunto likewise appertain the parties assistant in time of travail to help the labouring woman viz. strong women and maid servants which may lift her up and support her when she is in her labours and especially an expert Midwife which ought to mannage the whol Business For if the Midwife err in her office it is wont to cause difficulty of Birth For sometimes the Midwises do over soon exhort the Childing woman to hold their breath and to strain themselves to exclude their Child while the bands which fasten the Child to the Womb are as yet unloosed by which means the strength of the woman is wasted before hand which should have bin reserved to the just time of her travail Yea and the truth is while the Midwifes do oversoon perswade the Childing women that the time of their travail is at hand they bend all their strength to exclude the Child and oftentimes violently break those bands with which the Child is fastened and cast themselves into no small Jeopardy Hard Travail is known both by the Childing woman and by the Assistants but especially by the Midwife And in the first place if the woman continue a longer time than ordinary in her Labors as two three four or more daies whereas a truly natural Child-birth ought to be accomplished within the space of 24. Houres Again it is a Sign of an hard Labor if the womans paines be weak and are long before they return and if her paines are more about her Back than Privities And the Causes of hard travail are known by relation of the Childing woman and are for the most part evidently to be seen So the weakness of the woman her over leanness or over fatness is perceived by the habit of her Body Diseases of the Womb are known by their proper Signes The Childs weakness is known by its weak and slow moving it self But the Signes of a dead Child shall be declared in the next Chapter The greatness of the Child may be gathered from the stature of the Parents especially when a big-Bodyed man is matched with a little woman But when there are none of these Signes and the woman labours stoutly and the Child stirrs and makes its way sufficiently and yet the travail is hard and painful it is a token that the secundine or After-birth is stronger than ordinary and can hardly be broken which conjecture is more probable if no water or moisture come from the woman dureing her Labors The disorderly posture of the Child is perceived by the Midwife and the other Causes are visible to the Eye as we said before As for the Prognostick Hard-Travail is of it self dangerous in which sometimes the Mother sometimes the Child and sometimes both do loose their lives If a woman be four daies in Labor it s hardly possible the Child should live Sleepy diseases and convulsions which befall a woman in Travail are for the most part deadly Sneezing which befalls a woman in sore Travail is good Out of Hippocrates in his Aphorismes To cure difficulty in Child-birth first all causes which may delay the birth are as much as may be to be removed And afterwards such Medicines as further the Birth are Methodically to be administred And in the first place it is common among the women to give a groaning wife a spoonfull or two of Cinnamon Water Or Cinnamon it self in Pouder with a little Saffron may be given or half a dram of Consectio Alkermes may be drunk in a little Broath Also Saffron alone being given ten graines in every Mess of Broath the woman takes or every hour being taken in a little Wine is very good Or. Take Oyl of sweet Almonds and White Wine of each two ounces Saffron and Cinnamon of eath twelve graines Confectio Alkermes half a dram Syrup of Maiden Hair one ounce and an half Mix all and make thereof a potion If this shall not suffice but that stronger things must be used the following potion wil be most effectual which I have had frequent experience of Take Dictamnus Cretensis both the Birthworts and Trochiscs or Cakes of Myrrh of each half asc uple Saffron and Cinnamon of each twelve grains Confectio Alkermes half a dram Cinnamon Water half an ounce Orange-flower and Mugwort Water of each an ounce and an half Make all into a potion Among the more effectual sort of Medicaments are numbred Oyl of Amber Oyl of Cinnamon and extract of Saffron which do in a little quantity work ●●ch viz. Extract of Saffron
portion remains behind This happens principally in the Womb-Liver a part whereof is somtimes annexed to the Womb and left there doth putrefie which makes the Child-bed fluxes to come forth greenish stinking and Carrion like and if within few daies it be not separated from the womb and excluded it casts the sick woman into great danger of death seeing it may mortifie the Womb. If Clotters of Blood or any other preternatural thing shal remain in the Cavity of the womb after Child-bearing it may thereby be known because the neck of the womb remains soft and open neither is the inner Orisice thereof shut neither is the womb drawn upwards and whereas when all goes well after Child-birth the womb is drawn upwards and its neck and orifice are quickly shut An Example here of is propounded by Dr. Havey in his Treatise de Partu concerning a woman who having a malignant Feaver and being very weak miscarried and after exclusion of a perfect Child and uncorrupted yet being very weak with a creeping Pulse and cold Sweats she was ready to give up the Ghost He feeling her womb perceived the Orifice thereof lax soft and very wide and putting in his fingers he drew forth a Mole as big as a Gooses Egg having certain holes in it containing a clammy black and stinking putrefied matter and the woman was soon freed from the foresaid Symptomes and quickly recovered her health It happens likewise in some women that the Orifice of the womb presently after their delivery is so shut up that the blood contained within the womb suddenly clottering and putrefying causeth most sad Symptomes and when no Art can bring it forth present death follows Yet Dr. Harvey relates in the place aforesaid the History of a woman cured by him of this Disease The Lips of the Water-gate were swelled and very hot the mouth of the womb was hard and close shut He opened it a little with an Iron Instrument which he forcibly put in so as it would admit an Injection made by a Syringe and thereupon clotted black and stinking blood some pounds in quantity came away by which means the sick woman had present ease The Prognostick of these Feavers herein only differs from the Prognostick of such like Feavers which happen to those that are not in a childing condition because through the Labors of Child-birth the strength of the patient is more dejected and by reason of the Child-bed Purgations suppressed there is a greater redundancy of Humors in the Veins and in both respects the Party is in greater danger The Decision of that famous Question Whether the computation of the daies of the womans sickness ought to be made from the beginning of her Disease or from the day in which she is delivered of her Child makes much to cleer the Prognostick of this Disease especially to foretel the Crisis Which Question we shal therefore thus briefly determine If the Birth of the Child were natural attended with no grievous symptomes and the Child-bed Purgations were as they should be and the Feaver come some daies after the account ought not to be made from the day of the Childs birth but from the day the Feaver began which was provoked by some other preternatural Cause viz. Evil Humors lurking within the Body or from some external Cause But if the Child-birth were hard and beside the Course of Nature and the Feaver arose after three or four daies we must reckon from the day of the Childs birth because then the whol order of the Body began to be overthrown and the Humors to be disturbed which was followed by the Feaver So in grievous wounds of the wont of the Head especially though the Feaver come not til after the fourth of fifth day yet the account is wont to be made from the day of the wound received because the Humors began then to be in a commotion and to be disposed to cause a Feaver The Cure of these Feavers differs not from the Cure of other Feavers unless in point of those great Remedies Blood-letting and Purging in the administration whereof there is no smal scruple which we shal briefly endeavor to remove As for letting of Blood in acute Diseases of women in Child-bed the disagreement of Authors is so great by reason of the contrary Indications on the one side and on the other that we can scarcely find two of the same mind We shal briefly in these following Theorems or Maxims propound that Opinion which cometh neerest the Mind of the wisest Authors and is in the course of Practice most successful An Acute Disease befals a Child-bed woman either in the beginning or in the middle or in the end of her Lying in If it happen in the beginning and the woman be plentifully purged there must be no other evacuation of blood than that which is directed by Nature when she rightly and conveniently performs her Operations But if the Child-bed Purgations are suppressed or flow sparingly let the interiot Veins be opened and take a good quantity of blood away because at that time the Child-bed Purgations of blood ought by the appointment of Nature to be plentiful If an Acute Disease happen in the middle time of her Lying In two things are to be considered The one is Whether the Morbifick matter be contained in one particular place or if it be dispersed through the Veins The second Whether the Woman hath been conveniently purged or not in regard of quantity If the Disease proceed from matter scattered abroad as in Feavers and the woman hath not been fully purged the lower Veins ought to be opened because both the Morbisick Matter wil be diminished and her Natural flux wil be provoked But if the woman have been sufficiently purged and the Disease get ground and the Natural Evacuation have not been sufficient for the Disease the inferior Veins must be opened notwithstanding and so much blood must be taken away that by two Evacuations that may be accomplished which the Disease requires according to the Doctrine of Galen in the ninth Book of his Method Chap. ● If the Feaver be very high and great heat vex the Patient let that be done which we shal presently declare which ought to be performed when the Disease ariseth of Matter driven into some corner and there putrefying In a particular Acute Disease as the Pleurisie Inflamation of the Lungs Squinzy and the like we must mark whether the Fluxion be only beginning so that the Disease is only ready to seize upon the Patient or is in its beginning and very little blood be collected in the part For then the inserior Veins are to be opened that revulsion may be made to such opposite part For then the inserior Veins are to be opened that revulsion may be made to such opposite parts as are at greatest distance from the part affected and by that means that preposterous motion of Humors may be stopped But if the fluxion be already in good measure
work and puresie it clenses both it self and the Vessel Now this working doth commonly happen to Children howbeit somtimes to those that are elder and have attained Mans estate because it is evermore set on work by some external Cause such as is especially a certain disposition of ayr proportionable to this disease whence it comes to pass that somtimes the smal Pocks somtimes the Measles are rise because the Ayr is somtimes enclined to the one and somtimes to the other Neither can those impurites of the Mothers blood infect her and cause in her the same diseases althought Hippocrates saies in his Book de Natura Pueri that there are three parts of the blood one most pure with which the Child is nourished another impure wherewith the Mother is nourished and another most impurer which is kept in the Veins of the Womb the whol time of Going with Child and after the Birth is purged away in the Child-bed purgations For first seeing the Mother hath parts more hard and solid they do not so soon take impresion as the tender and soft body of the Child Again that most impure part of the blood which is kept in the Veins of the womb and of the After-birth the whol time of belly-bearing doth infect the blood in the passage which is carryed through those parts to Nourish the Child whence the Child contracts and evil quality which in its time is the Cause of that ebullition in the blood of the Child But that impurest part of the blood remaining in the foresaid places doth not infect the body of the Mother Furthermore it s not to be wondered at that the breaking out of the smal Pocks and Measles is somtimes so long deferred as that some have them at Mans estate For those impurites do not substantially remain in the body as many imagine for they would be corrupted by long stay and acquire a most grevious putrefaction But only an evil quality is by them imprinted upon the parts of the Child which in process of time infecting some part of the humors becomes offensive to Nature which then rowsing her self doth drive those infected portions of the humors into the Skin And forasmuch as in the Mass of blood a twosold excrement is found the one thick the other thin of the thick the smal Pocks are bred of the thin the Measles And although the evil and malignant quality be one and the same insecting both excrements yet because the Nature of the excrements is different the Analogy of the external Cause unto them both is Different whence it comes to pass that sometimes the smal Pocks and somtimes the Measles are Epidemically spread abroad And although the smal Pocks are wont to break forth in the whol body yet are they wont to appear in greatest quantity in the face feet and hands which is otherwise in the purple spots of the Purple Feaver for they appear most on the breast and back The Cause of which difference is this that inasmuch as the smal Pocks arise from an ebullition of the blood by help whereof an Excretion is made of the excrements lurking therein unto the Skin and the Liver being the Fountain and original of blood whose Emunctories are the Face Hands and Feet whence it comes that such as have hot Livers have red and rubied faces and feel intense heat in the palmes of their hands and Soals of their feet it follows that the smal Pocks and Measles must come out there more than any where else Contrarywise the purple spotts which appear in malignant Feavers do arise principally from the Misaffection of the Heart and therfore they break out chiefly in parts near the Heart and especially about the Loines because in them the Vena Cava ascendens and the Arteria aorta which are annexed unto the Hair have their Course Also another difference is to be noted between the smal Pocks and Purples because the smal Pocks and Measles appearing on the third or fourth day from the beginning of the Feaver are wont to be critical and for the most part void of danger but the purple spots though they appear on the seventh day are commonly Symptomatical and render the disease worse whenas a man would think it should be otherwise for a disease is more crude on the fourth than the seveuth day But the Cause of this difference consists herein that in the smal Pocks and Measles the Feaver commonly begins at the highest so that not only on the third and fourth day but also on the first or second daies excretions may be in them critical But malignant Feavers proceed more slowly and their beginning is commonly Extended to the seventh day so that Excretions which then happen cannot be critical Now that the Pox and Measles come so soon to their state and not the malignant Feavers is hence because the Pox and Measle-Feaver comes from the lightest putrefaction and rather from an Ebullition of the blood than from any intense putrefaction of the matter and therfore Nature by help of Coction makes it to cease before the seventh day because it was a light Feaver and rose from the slightest Causes But in malignant Feavers so great and fordid is the putrefaction that it cannot be corrected in the fourteenth nor somtimes in the twentieth day And therefore the spotts breaking out before that time the disease is exasperated because Nature was forced to expel them without Concoction and symptomatically The expulsion therefore of smal pox and Measles is caused by an Ebullition of the blood which Ebullition according to Avicennas doctrine is twofold the one perfective the other corruptive The perfective or depurative is that in which only the impurer and excrementitious parts of the blood are by Nature purged forth that the whol mass may afterward remain pure and then the smal Pocks are innocent which are cured without any help of Physick But the corruptive is wherein not onely the excrementitous parts of the blood but the sincere blood it self is putrefied whence arise dangerous and deadly pox and according as there is more or less putrefaction in more in more or fewer parts of the blood so is the danger more or less This corruptive Ebullition doth cheifly happen when those diseases are epidemical being occasioned by a malignant Constitution of the Air by which an ebullition of the humors and a malignant putrefaction is caused whonce many and dangerous smal Pocks are caused which are somtimes according to Rhasis the Forerunners of the Plague Pocks and Measles are reckoned among acute diseases because ordinarily they are terminated within the space of fourteen daies Now som do wittily observe a double order of times in times in this disease viz. the time of ebullition and the time of eruption the time of ebullition is commonly terminated in four daies so that the first day is counted the beginning the second the Augment the third the state and the fourth the declination for then the Feaver and other symptomes
are wont to remit But the beginning of the Eruption of the Pox is the fourth day it self the Augment reaches to the seventh the state until the eleventh the declination unto the fourteenth at which time the Pocks are dried Howbeit oftentimes they are not dry until the twentieth day Differences of sinall Pocks and Measles are taken either from the substance in regard of which some are more or less Flegmatick Bloody Chollerick or Melanchollick or from the Quantity in which regard they are more or less in number greater or less profound or Superficial or from the Quality in which respect some are red others white yellowish Violet colored Livid black according to the diversity of Humors of which they are compounded or from the time in respect whereof some come quickly out others slowly some are soon others late ripe or dissolved or from the place in which respect some occupy only the Skin others do seaz upon the internal Parts also as the Throat Lungs Guts Liver Spleen and other bowels The Diagnosis respects either the Disease present or at hand The smal Pocks and Measles when they are present are subject to the outward Sences and need therefore no other signs But these signs following declare them to be at hand Pain in the Head with Pulsation in the Forehead and Temples great Sleepiness Terrors in Sleep sometimes Ravings Tremblings and Convulsions Sneezings frequent Yawning Hoarsness Cough Difficulty in breathing Heat Redness and Sence of pricking over the whol body Pain of the back which comes sometimes alone or appearing with few other Symptoms in a Synorchus Feaver it shews the smal Pocks will come out For seeing through the back are carried the great Vein and Artery in which the malignant blood boiling does send forth sharp vapors to the Nerves and neighboring Membranes it must needs be that pains should be felt especially in those parts Great Anxiety and unquietnels Tears flowing of themselves Shining before the Eyes and their Itching a swelling of the Face with some Redness A vehemency of the Symptoms at first so that the Disease seems of a sudden to have attained its vigor All which are caused eather by many and thick vapors sent up by the boiling of the blood into the Head Diaphragm and other parts or from the Nature of the Pocks themselves now beginning to invade the parts or by a Fluxion caused by heat which dissolves the Humors in the Brain It 's of great Moment to foresee the smal Pox but much more to foretel their event which the following Prognostick Signs wil declare And in the first place those smal Pox are wont to be void of danger which come out soon and easily and do quickly ripen In which the Feaver is moderate without great Symptomes which ceases after they are come out or is very much abated In which the voyce is free and breathing easie Smal Pox which at first are red and white soft distinct few round pointed coming only in the Skin and not inwardly are wont to be safe All the Signs aforesaid do signifie the paucity of the Morbifick Matter it 's Obsequiousness Benignity and the strength of Nature lustily expelling Contrary wise dangerous and deadly Pox are known by a great Feaver which lessens not after they are broak forth for it signifies the malignant and venemous humors are not sufficienly expelled unto the Skin but that the greatest part of them remains yet in the Veins Great anxiety and unquietness which comes from the same humors boiling in the Veins Difficulty of breathing which signifies either pustles or Impostumes in the Lungs or a Squinsie or great decay of strength Great thirst which declares the inward burning and if with the thirst shortness of breath be encreased Death is at hand A Loosness or bloody Flux which shews the malignant humors have their recourse inward which is a course quite contrary to that of Nature and therefore deadly so that few of those which after the Pox coming out are taken with such a Loosness do escape A Bloodie Urine is a most deadly sign and likewise if by stool pure and sincere blood be voided Somtimes also by the Nostrils Gums and other parts of the body blood is voided which are commonly deadly Signs For they signifie the extream Acrimony and malignity of the blood which doth vehemently provoke Nature and compells her to a preposterous excretion thereof Also Pox long a coming out are very bad which signifie the contumacy of the matter or the weaknes of Nature Many Great Double and united Pox do shew an overabundant quantity of Morbifick matter and are bad So are hard ones shewing the thickness and incoctibility of the said matter Also flatt ones which shew the weakness of the expulsive faculty and they are worse if they have a black spot in the middles of them which argues extraordinary malignity And green blewish and black which spring from that sort of choller called Bilis porraca or Atra Leeke-green or black Choller are a bad sign They are worst of al which when they are come forth do presently vanish and the tumor of the parts falls for they signifie the retirement of the Humor inwards and none of those escape who have the Pox on this manner going in again but they die commonly within twenty four houres They are also dangerous when sports like those of the purple or spotted Feaver are mingled among the pox especially if those spots be livid or black For they signifie not only that same light putrefaction which is wont to happen in the small Pox by means of the ebullition of blood but also that intense and profound Malignity is peccant from which much greater danger is threatened to the Patient Dung or Urines in this Disease livid or black do portend great danger for they signifie that Melancholly abounds in the Veins and infects the whol Mass of Blood The cure of the small Pox Measles is performed in the satisfaction of four Indications whereof the first consists in the Evacuation of the peccant humors The second in assisting the motion of nature or helping to expell the Pox. The third in the opposition of the malignant and venemous quality The fourth in correction of symptoms All which that they may be conveniently effected first a convenient diet must be appointed which must be the same which was ordered in the cure of putrid Feavers howbeit some things must be particularly noted First that the patients be kept in a warm room to the end their pores may be kept open the breaking out of the smal Pox may there be furthered therefore they must be kept in a Chamber well shut which the cold air must in no wise enter into For many Children that had benigne Pox have been killed by letting in the cold ayr upon them viz. the morbifick matter being thereby driven back into the inward parts And for the same cause they must be moderately covered with Cloathes but so that the heat of
an Apple so called Pubes the hairy Hillock above the privities in men and women The word signifies ripeness because that hair being grown out testifies the parties to be fit to engender Paerineum the space which runs like a ridge between the privities and fundament in men and women Praeposterous unnaturall undue unfitting Perturbation of the Eyes a troubled drousie frighted look of the Eyes Procatarctick Causes primarie first working and occasional Causes So in a Feaver the next immediate Cause is putrefied choller c. but the first working occasional causes were the patients taking cold by swimming in the cold-water whereby the pores became shut and the Matter of the Disease was retained in the Body So the Procatarctick Cause of worms in Children is their greedy eating of Fruit but the immediate Cause is putrid humors occasioned by those Fruits out of which humors the worms breed Precipitated thrown head-long forcibly cast down Palliative Cure is when a Disease is not taken away but only mitigated and made more mild so that the patient may have as much ease as possible Or if the Disease deform the Body a palliative Cure does hide as much as may be that deformity So an Eye being thurst out cannot be properly cured but it may admit of a palliative cure in asswaging the pain and other Symptoms and by putting into the place thereof a Glass or other Artificial Eye Potent powerful Perspirable the Body is said to be Perspirable when the invisible Pores or holes in the skin are kept open so that the vapors arising from evil Humors may freely breath out See Transpiration Pernicious deadly causing death destruction Protraction is a lengthening out of a Disease and making the same to last long Pharmaceutick Remedies whatsoever kind of Medicines are made by the Apothecary Praeposterous disorderly undue unfit the Cart before the Horse Quittor See Matter R Repletion over much fulness of blood or Humors Resolution weakening or dissolving the strength of a part as when it is palsyed c. Revulsion drawing back of blood or Humors from the part affected Repelling Medicines which draw back the humor from the part affected Repellers the same Relaxing Slacking as the string of a bow when the bow is unbent is said to be relaxed or slackned To Revel to draw back Humors from the part diseased Remitted lessened abated Restriction exception limitation Ruption breaking or tearing asunder Reliques remainders of an Humor after Solemn purging bleeding c. Retraction drawing back Radical moisture the fundamental juice of the Fundamental juice of the body which nourishes and preserves the natural heat as the oile in a lampe preserves and feeds the flame Revelled drawen back Revulsives remedies to draw back the Humor from the Diseased part Repelled driven away Retentive faculty the power in our body and its parts to hold fast its nutriment and what ever is agreeable thereunto Rough Arterie or Aspera Arteria is the wind-pipe or Wesand which is rough on the out side with circles and gristly rings Reduced brought bach againe Refractions breaking of the Representations of visible objects a terme used by the writers of Opticks or the Art of seeing Recruted repaired restored made up a military Resolving medicaments are such as loosen and scatter evil humors which are gathered and combined together in some diseased part of the Body Re●ercussives medicines which drive back the Humors from a diseased part Relaxation loosenes Refrigerating cooling Resp ration breathing Reflux flowing back again Recipient part is that part which receives the Humor offending S Suppository that which is put into the Fundament to cause solubleness Sudo● osick that is causing sweat Subeth a deep sleep Scarefication is a cutting of the Skin that it may bleed into a Cupping-glass Superficies the outside of any thing Stuphes Stoves or Hot-Houses to sweat in Spiritus acousticos is that portion of the spirit which in the Eares discerneth sounds Strangulation choaking Sternon the breast bone See Veslingus Anatomie in English Sphinchter is the Musle of the Arse Stupor dulness Spasmus cramp or Convulsion A Scruple is twenty graines or the weight of so many barley cornes Sternutatories medicines to snuf into the nose to provoke sneezing Stupefying taking away the sence of feeling benumming Stupid that is benummed besotted hath no feelling or sense blockish Symptomes evil dispositions of the Body which depend upon and accompany a disease as Heat th●●st Headach want of sleep stomach-sickness faintings swoonings c. Sympathy fellow-feeling a disease is said to come by sympathy when the principal cause is in some other part with which the part offended hath a fellow-feeling So paines of the Head caused by evil Humors in the stomach are said to come by sympathy And sickness of stomach caused by stone in the kidneys is a disease of the stomach by sympathy Nerves Sinnewes certaine strings carrying the facultie of Motion and sence from the Braine into all parts of the Body see Veslingus Anatomie in English Scorbut the Scurvie Steeled in which steel hath bin quenched or infused Scorbutick persons that are troubled with the scurvy Spinal of or belonging to the Back-bone Serous matter wheyish like whey Sutures seams of the Head where the parts of the skull are joined together Species of the Objects representations of things seen For the visible things themselves do not enter into the eyes but certain images and figures of them Scituation place or posture Species retained in the Mind the shapes and patterns of things seen or heard c. State of the disease is when it is at the highest and does neither encrease nor decrease Saphena A vein of the foot which is usually opened in woemen see Veslingus Anatomie in English Sal-prunellae salf-peter purified with Brimstone Clean white salt Peter is as good for use only the Chymists love to mend Magnificat and many times take great pains to little purpose Sphacelus deadnes of any part when the flesh and bone are dead sphacelation signifies the same Superfluous over much unnecessary c. Speculum Oris an Instrument wherewith the Mouth and throat is kept open that the parts diseased may be seen and dealt with Scirrhus an hard swelling without pa●● Suppurated an Impostume is said to be suppurated when it gathers matter enclines to break Suppuration a collection of matter in an impostume Suppression stoppage Solution of continu●●ie a dividing of such parts as were naturally united so every wound and Sore is called a solution of continuity c. Stupes cow or Cotton-wooll Sealed Earth Terra Sigillata it is a kind of Medicinal Earth brought out of the straights sealed in little flatt cakes to avoid Imposture the Seal is wont to be the great Turks badg viz. the half moon Sparadrap a cerecloath Sediment the settlings and dregs of Urine or any other liquor Suppression stoppage Sincere excrements are such as are pure and unmixed as choller alone c. Sudoroficks medicines causing Sweat Suffocating choaking