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A64906 The English-mans treasure with the true anatomie of mans body / compiled by ... Mr. Thomas Vicary, Esquire ... ; whereunto are annexed many secrets appertaining to chyrurgerie, with divers excellent approved remedies ...; Profitable treatise of the anatomie of mans body Vicary, Thomas, d. 1561.; Turner, William, d. 1568. Of the bath of Bathe, in England.; Bremer, William.; Boraston, William. Necessary and briefe relation of the contagious disease of the pestilence.; Mondeville, Henri de, 14th cent.; Lanfranco, of Milan, 13th cent.; Ruscelli, Girolamo, d. ca. 1565.; Fioravanti, Leonardo, 1518-1588.; Ward, William, 1534-1609.; Hester, John, d. 1593. 1641 (1641) Wing V334; ESTC R13290 183,199 320

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spitting heauy head and fluggy and slombry and cold hands and féet and namely in the Night Sanguine is moyst and hot swéet and ruddy coloured alway his Body is full of heate namely in the Veynes and they bée swelling and of face he is ruddy and in fléepe bée séemeth fiery Medicine for him is bloud let vpon the Currall or Liver Veyne and simple dyet as Tyson Water-Grewell and sower bread Choller is hot and dry yellow gréene and bitter his Vrine is discoloured and thinne his Pulse is long and straight much watch heauy head-ache and thirst bitter mouth ane dry singing eares and much gnawing in the Wombe and other while coffiffenesse and burned Sege and vomit both yellow and gréene as is that colour Each Humour may cause a Fever or an Impostume and then the Vrine is more coloured and the liquour thinner and ever as that sicknesse de●●eth the Vrine waxeth thicker and the colour lower till it come to Cytrin or subrufe Melancholy causeth a Quartaine and Fleame a Quotidian Sinec and Causon haue ever Continewes the other thrée may be so and other while Interpolate continue ever holdeth on and Interpolate resteth other while continue is with the Veynes and Interpolate is without the Veynes both two wayes may bée simple and also compound simple of one matter and one place or compound of divers places The Tertians of these Fevers be such as the same humors bée of and also Vrine and Pulse All saving they bée stronger in Fevers and Impostumes then they be without and therefore their Medicine must bée more discréet but generally Dyet thus Sower bread and Water grewell and Tyson and fleyed Fish and Wine and Almond milke● and all white meate saving whay generall digestiue in Summer and in hot time as in Orizacia and generall digestiue in Winter and all cold time as Oxcineile And generall expulsiue is desuccarosarum a cut with Turbit and Scamony ana Scruple two and generall doem●ary is insquiamany and double-medled with Populions and fament him with Rose ana double Sugar slaketh thirst Signes of Sicknesse by Egestion IF the meate come from a man in manner as hée did eate it the Stomacke is weake and the Bowels bée lubricated and it is an evill signe If the Egestion looke like Earth it is a signe of death If the Egestion doe not stinke it is an evill signe If the Egestion doe looke like lead it is an evill signe If the Egestion bée blacke as Inke it is an evill signe If the Egestion bée blacke and looke like Shéepes trickles there is aboundance of adust Choller and paine in the Spléene If the Egestion be yell●●● and no Saffron eaten before the body is repleaf with Choller and E●●en water If the Egestion haue straines of bloud there is impediment in the Liuer and the Bowels If the Egestion bée bloudish there is viceration in the 〈◊〉 If the Egestion looke like shaving of Gut● beware then of 〈…〉 Fluxe and ●chiliry of the Body If a man bée 〈◊〉 Laxatius it is not good for in such persons can be no strength but much weaknesse If a man be costiue and cannot haue a naturall gestion once a day he cannot be long without Sicknesse Signes of Life or Death by the Pulses SPigmos is named the Pulses and there be twelue Pulses the which doe take their Originall at the Vitall spirits Thrée of which belong to the Heart the one is vnder the left Pap the other two doe lye in the Wrests of the armes directly against the Thumbs The Braine hath respect to seaven Pulses foure be principall and thrée be Minors the foure principall are thus scituate in the Temples two and one going vnder the Bone called the right Furkcle and the other doth lye in the corner of the right side of the Nose one of the thrée Minor Pulses in the corner of the left side of the Nose And the other two lye vpon the Mandibles of the two Iawes the Liver hath respect to the two Pulses which lye vpon the Féet By these Pulses expert Physitions and Chyrurgions by their knocking and clapping doe judge what principall member is diseased or whether the Patient be in danger If any of the principall pulses doe not beate truely kéeping an equall course as the minute of a clocke then there is no perill in the Patient so be it they kéepe a true course or puise without any pause or stopping which is to say if the Pulse giue fiue knockes and cease at the sixth knocke or else seuen and pause at eight or else knocke tenne and leape ouer the eleuenth and begin and the twelfth the Patient is in perill else not for it is not in the agility as t●● swift or tardie beating of the Pulse but in the pausing of the same contrary to its course that the Patient is in perill In such causes let the Physitian be circumspect and carefull for Sincopies in the Patient let him sit vpright in his Bed with Pillowes and let one fit at his backe to giue him drinke and let the Patient smell to Amber gréece or Rose water and Vineger or else rub the Pulse with Aqua Vitae Also when you touch the Pulse marke vnder which finger it strikes most strongest as thus If the Pulse vnder the little finger be féeble and weake and vnder the rest more weake it is a token of Death But contrariwise if vnder the little finger strong and vnder every finger stronger it is a good signe Also if the féele the Pulse vnder the fore finger vntill the eleventh stroke and it faile in it is a good signe but if he beate swift and vnorderly an evill OF WATERS Here followeth ni● precious Waters and first to make Water of Philosophers PART VIII TAke Isope Pennyriall Avence Century and breake them in a Morter and put them vnder the cap of a Stillatorie and distill them and that water hath many vertues which may be proved by assayes Take Pimpernell Rew Valerian Sedwall Aloes and of the Stone called Lapis Calumniaris and breake them and lay them in the water of Philosphers and let them be boyled together vntill the third part be wasted of the said Waters and after the said water shall be strained thorow a linnen cloth and then close all in a Viall of glasse nine dayes This is a precious water to drinke foure dayes together with a fasting stomacke for him that hath the Falling sicknesse and let him be fasting sixe houres after and this Madicine is in our judgement the truest medicine against all manner of Goutes and against Palsies as long as it is not dead in the limbes or member of a man Item this water drunke in the morning is most helping to Wounds fettered so that it be washed therewith Item this water drunke fasting will destroy all manner of Fevers or Aches of what manner soever they come to a man And trust to this Medicine verily for it is the best Water for these diseases aforesaid that may be
must learns that they must not appoint God a time to heals them by the Bathe and that when as the Bath hath dryed vp and washeth vp by Sweating and subtill through blowing the evill matter of the disease that it is one dayes worke or two to make good humours to occupie the place of such evill humours as haue béene in them before Therefore let such be patient and for the space of a Moneth kéepe the same dyet that they képt at the Bath and if God will they shall haue their desire but not onely these but all others that are heales for a moneth at the least the longer the better must kéepe the same dyet that they kept it the Bath as touching meate and drinke and if it be possible also from the vse of all Women When as you goe homewards make but small Iourneyes and beware of sursetting and of colde and when you are at home vse measurable Exercise daily and honest mirth and pastime with honest company and be ware of too much study or carefulnesse Thankes be to God for all his Guifts A Briefe Treatise of Vrines as well of Mans Vrines as of Womans to judge by the Colour which betokeneth Health and which betokeneth Weaknesse and also Death PART VI. IT is shewed that in the fore-parts of the Body dwelleth Sicknesse and Health That is in the Wombe in the Head in the Liver and in the Bladder in what manner thou mayst know their properties and thereof thou mayest learne When Bubbles doe swim on the top of Vrine they procéed of windy matter included in viscous humidity and signifie ●●wnesse and indigestion in the Head Belly Sides ●eynes and parts thereabouts for in these especially hu●●ours are multiplied and doe ascend to make paine in the Head Resident Bubbles doth signifie ventositie in the Body or else a Sicknesse that hath continued long and will continue vnlesse remedy be found but Bubbles not Resident but doth breake quickly signifieth Debility or Weaknesse Bubbles clea●ing to the Vrinall signifieth the body to be repleat with evill humours Bubbles doth also signifie the Stone in the Reynes of the Backe A Circle which is gréene of colour of Vrine doth signifie wavering 〈◊〉 the H●●● and 〈…〉 the stomacke This colour in a ●●aver doth 〈…〉 od●●●ing of Choller And if it continue it will cause an Impostume the which will ingender the Frenzi● A blacke circle in Vrine signifieth Mortification If any filthy matter doe appeare in the Vrine it commeth from the Lungs and sometimes from the Liver and it may come from breaking of some Impostume but for the most part it commeth from the Vlcers of the Bladder or the Reynes or from the passages of the Vrine then the vrine is troubled in the bottome and stinketh he hath a paine in his lower parts and especially in the parts aforesaid when he maketh water and chiefly in the end of the yard and commonly there is with this the Strangurie which is hardly to be cured vnlesse it be in the beginning If it come from the Reynes there is paine in the Loynes the Backe and the Flanke If from the Liver the paine is onely in the right side If in the Lungs the paine ●●●tcom the Brost with a cough and the breath stinketh If from the Bladder the paine is about the share If a mans vrine he white of morning and red before meate and white after meate he is whole and if it be fat and thicke it is not 〈◊〉 And if the Vrine be ●●●●ly thicke it is not good to like and if it be thicke as spice it betokeneth Head ache Vrine that is two dayes red and at the tenth day white betokeneth very good health Vrine that is fat white and mayst betokeneth the Fever Quartaine Vrine that is bloody betokeneth that the Bladder is hurt by some rotting that is within A little Vrine all Fleshie betokeneth of the Reynes who pisseth Blood without sicknesse hée hath ●ome Veyne broken in his Reynes Vrine that is ponderous betokeneth that the bladder is hurt Vrine that is bloody in sicknesse betokeneth great evill in the Body and namely in the bladder Vrine that falleth by drops aboue as it were great boules betokeneth great sicknesse and long If white gravell doth issue foorth with Vrine it doth signifie that the Patient hath or shall haue the Stone ingendred in the Bladder and there is paine about those parts If the gravell be red the Stone is ingendred in the Reynes of the Backe and Kidneyes and there is great paine in the small of the Backe If the gravell be blacke it is ingendred of a Melancholly Humour Note that if the gravell goe away and the Patient find no ease it sheweth that the Stone is confirmed Also know yée that if the gravell goe away and the paine goe away likewise it signifieth that the Stone is broken and wydeth away Womens Vrine that is cleare and shyning in the Vrinall like silver if shée cast oft and if she haue no talent to meate it betokeneth she is with Child Womens Vrine that is strong and white with stinking betokeneth sicknesse in the Reynes in her secret Receipts in her chambers full of evill humours and of sicknesse of her selfe Womens Vrine that is bloody and cleare as water vnder betokeneth Head-ache Womens vrine that is like to Gold cleare and mighty betokeneth that she hath lust to man Womens vrine that hath colour of stable cleansing betokeneth her to haue the Fever Quartaine and shée to dye the third day Womens vrine that appeareth an colour of Leave if shée be with Child betokeneth that i● is ●a●d within her Hereafter followeth all the Vrines that betokeneth Death as well the Vrine of Man as of Woman IN a hot Axes one part red another blacke another gréene another blew betokeneth Death Vrine in hot axes blacke and little in quantity betokeneth Death Vrine coloured all over as Leade betokeneth the prolonging of death Vrine that shineth raw and right bright if the Skin in the bottome shine not it betokeneth death Vrine that in substance having Fléeting aboue as it were a darke Sky signifieth death Vrine darkly shyning and darke with a blacke Skin within betokeneth a prolonging of death Vrine that is the colour of water if it haue a darke Sky in an Axes it betokeneth death Vrine that hath dregges in the bottome medled with blood it betokeneth death Vrine blacke and thicke and if the sicke loath when he goeth to the Priuy and when he speaketh overthwart or that he vnderstandeth not aright and these sicknesses goeth not from him it betokeneth death Hereafter followeth sundry VVaters and Medicines meete for Physicke and Chy●urgerie As also Oyntments and Plaisters PART VII A Man may governe himselfe at foure times in the Yeare so that hée shall have no néed of Letchcraft as thus Ver beginneth the Eight Ides of March and endeth the Eight Ides of May at what time waxeth the good swéet juyce of Sanguine through good meates and