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

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Melancholye whych humours are called y e sonnes of the Elementes because they be complexioned lyke the four elementes For lyke as the ayre is hote and moyste so is the bloud hote and moyst And as fyer is hote and dry so is choler hote drye And as water is colde and moist so is phlegme colde and moiste And as the yearth is colde and dry so melācholy is colde and dry Whereby it apereth that there be nyne complexions Whereof .iiii be symple y t is to wete hote colde moyst and dry and .iiii. cōplexions compounde that is hote and moyst which is the complexion of the ayre and of blood Hote dry whiche is the complexion of the fyre and of cholere Colde and moist which is the cōplexcion of the water of phlegme and colde and dry that is the complexion of earth and of melancholie The nynth complexion is temperate neyther to hote nor to colde nor to moyst nor to drye whych yet is a thing very seldome sene amonge men After the phisicions the sayde foure humours gouerne rule euery one in his place and enduce mē to be of the complexions folowyng ¶ The complexion of the phlegmatyke Phlegme enclyneth a man to be well fourmed a sleper dul of vnderstandyng full of spattle full of coloure ¶ The cōplexcions of the sanguyne Blood causeth one to be full of fleshe liberall amyable curtyse merye inuentyue bolde lecherous of red coloure ¶ The cōplexcions of the cholerike Cholere causeth a mā to be hastye enuyous couetous subtyle cruell a watcher prodigall leane and of yelowe coloure ¶ The complexions of the melancholyke Melancholy maketh one Solytarye Soft spirited Fearfull Heauye Curyous Enuious Couetous Blacke of coloure ¶ These be the foure humours wherof the bodyes are compounded euery one of them hath a special dominiō in respect of al the other according to the age that is to say from a mannes natiuitie til he come to .xxv. yeres the bloud hath most power and from that time to the yeare of his age .xxxv. raygneth the Choler for then commethe heate into the vaynes and the choler begynneth to aryse and be strong Then cōmeth myddle age and bryngeth forthe melancholye an humoure colde and dry and hath his enduraūce tyl fyfty yeres or ther about at which tyme all the humours of the body begynne to diminyshe and the naturall heate by lytle and lytle dothe abate And thē succedeth olde age vnto deth in the which age phlegme hath y e prīcipal power and dominion Wherfore it shalbe necessarye for al that be of y e age to cōfort their bodyes with some natural heate and meates of good noryshyng as yolkes of egges potched good and yonge fleshe wheate bread good wyne and all suche thynges as engendre good bloud and spirites whereof we entende by the sufferaunce of God to declare more aboundauntly hereafter ¶ Here followeth the descripcion of inwarde and outwarde diseases wyth the moste holsome and expert remedies for the cure therof appropriat to euery membre thoroughout the body The fyrste chapter of the sickenesse and remedyes of the heed HEad ache chaunceth often times of diuers and sondry causes as of bloud cholere fle●●e or melancholy or of ventositye and sometimes of heat of the sunne or of to great cold of y e aire Ye maye knowe heade ache when it commeth of bloude for in the face and eyes there appeareth a darke redenes prickyng and heauines with heat Remedye Ye must let hym bloude on the head veine on that side that the peine is on then laye vpon the place oyle of roses vineger and rose water or a bag with roses sprinkeled with rose water And here is to be noted as wel ī this cause as all other that yf his belly be harde and bounde fyrst ye must geue him an easye glister or elles halfe an ounce of Cassia newly drawen out of the cane or some other easye laxatyue to prouoke the duety of the womb els al applicacions of medicines wyll bee nothyng worth at all One maie know heade ache that procedeth of cholere when in the face ther is a clere rednes enclining somewhat towarde yelowe holownesse of y e iyes the mouth drye and hote And sometymes bytternesse small reste greate heate with sharpe paine chief●y on the ryght syde of the head ¶ Remedye Ye muste geue hym morne and euen to drinke sirupe of violettes or pomegranades with a meane draught of endiue water in a glasse or of comin water sodden and cooled agayne And in stead of these sirupes ye maye drynke water of endiue succorye purcelane nenuphar myngled together or one of them by them self two or .iii. daies at euenyng and morning Then geue a drāme of pillule sine quibus at night to bedwarde or about midnight the day folowing kepe you ī your chāber In stede of those pilles it is good euery mornīg to take an houre afore sūne a medicine to drynke y t shall be made of halfe an ounce of Succo rosarum mixt with two ounces of water of endiue In steade of the saied succo rosarum ye may take halfe an ounce of diaprunis laxatiue ye must take hede in gyuyng suche purgacions that the pacient be strōg for if he be weake ye may gyue hym but the halfe of y e sayd pylles or of the other laxatyues And yf in diminishyng the quantitie of the sayde medicines it worketh not with the pacient as it shuld it is conueniēt to gyue hym a common glister ¶ An other remedy for the same peyne Ye must laye theron a lynnen clothe moysted in rose water plantayne water morel water and vinegre or elles take the iuyce of lettuce and roses a litle vineger and warme it together and dippe therin a linnen clothe and laye it to the payne An other Ye must take the whytes of .ii. egges wyth rose water and beate it well togyther and wyth towe or flaxe lay it to y e greued place Also ye must shaue his heed and mylke thereon womans mylke that nourysheth a wenche or wasshe hys heed wyth warme water wherein haue bene sodde vine leaues sage floures of water lilies roses Also it is necessary to wash his feete legges wyth the sayde water so that the pacient haue no reume for if there be reumatike matters ye oughte nether to shaue his heed wash his legges nor to lay any colde thing or moist to his heed Ye maye knowe that fleume is cause of the peine in the heed when ye fele coldnesse with great heuinesse speciallye in the hyndre parte when one spytteth often and hath his face lyke sunne brent ¶ Remedye Ye must drynke .iii. or .iiii. morninges sirupe of sticados with water of fenel or sirupe of wormewood with a decoction of sauge and maiorym Then ye must pourge the heade from the sayde fleume wyth pillule cochie and wyth pilles of agarici or pillule auree made with one of the sayde sirupes fyue in a dramme and
¶ The .vii. of medicines preparatiue The second parte is deuyded into .vi chapters ¶ The fyrste howe to knowe whan a man is infected ¶ The second of the cure of the pestilence by the way of dyete ¶ The thyrde of the cure of the pestilence by the power of medicines ¶ The .iiii. of cure therof by lettynge of blood ventoses and purgacions ¶ The .v. of the cure of the same by outwarde applicacions ¶ The .vi. how to cure the botch called a Carbuncle or Anthrax ¶ The fyrste chapter of the fyrste part treating of the election of the ayer ALthough the disposiciō of the aier cold and drie or els moderately moiste be moche commendable in y e time of pestylence yet there must be moderatiō in the same as well as in the .vi. thinges not natural heretofore declared For ye muste haue a good respecte vnto the complexiō the age the custome of lyuing the region composicion of the bodye strengthe sicknes time and many other thinges For some requyre an ayer more hote than other some do and likewise in o●her thynges the whiche I do remyt vnto the good discreacion of euery wel lerned man and to such other as haue any knowlege of naturall thynges For the more suerty it is good for thē y t may to dwel in hygh or hylly groūdes hauing in the mornyng whan the sunne is vp a wyndowe open toward the easte and whan the sonne goethe downe an other windowe open toward the west and close vp al y e windowes on the south syde for that wīd is verye yll in time of pestilence Also it is good to rectifie the ayre within the house yf it be in somer by sprynklyng in the chamber vynegre water of roses if it be winter or colde make a lusty fier of clene wood put in it encence mirre laurel tre or iuniper or cipres and in tyme temperate mingle the hote thinges with y e colde aforesayde Whiche sprincklinges and burninges ye maye make at all times whan ye wyll but specially in the morning to correcte the vapoures of the night I rede in Plotyne that the egiptians were wont to fume their houses and theyr bodyes in the day with turpentine or rosin and in the night with mirre caste vpō the coales and so resisted al venimous ayres contagions The fyrste hath so greate vertue against the pestilence that we rede how Hypocrates preserued the hole coūtry and citye of Athenes by makynge of great fyres in the stretes and al about the towne by nighte and so deliuered them from the certayne death y t shuld haue comen among them For which cause the citizens of the sayde towne made vnto hym an ymage al of golde and honoured hym alyue as yf he had bene a god And it is good in hote time to s●we the chambre ful of wyllowe leaues other fresh boughes which must be gathered after the sunne setting lay about your bedde and windowes vine leaues quinces pomegranades orenges lymons citrons and suche other frutes that are odoriferous as roses floures of nenuphar violettes other like And in cold times take sage laurell minte wormwood nept bawme rue and galingale whiche thynges ye maye somtyme cary aboute wyth you in a cloth to take the ayer of them And in time of heate temper a sponge or a cloute in water of roses vinegre And in tyme of cold ye may adde to it a litle cinamome thus he that is disposed to haue precious sauours as pomeaunders or other such may cōpose them according to necessitie as y e cōplexiō of his body shal require Alway takyng hede y e women whiche are wyth chyld and they that haue y e suffocation of the mother or els catarres take no such odour as shal put thē selues to any daunger or displeasure In a colde tyme it is good to hold in the mouth zedoary enulacampana cinamome cloues the rinde of a citrō lignum aloes or any one of them But yf the season of the yere be hoote then take corianders prepared graines of paradyse saunders seedes of orenges or of lymons And in tēper at wether myngle the one with the other But it is good in all tymes to beare about you preciouse stones yf ye haue thē speciallye a iacincte a rubie a garnet an emeralde or a saphyre whiche hath a special vertue agaynst the pestilence they be the stōger yf they be borne vpon youre naked skinne chieflye vpon the fourth finger of the left hande for that hath greate affinitie with the hert aboue other membres And as touchynge them that are contynually among the sycke of this disease they muste take hede in any wise to kepe them from theyr breathe and that they do not stande betwene them and the fyre nor receiue the odoure of theyr swettes vrynes vomites and other excrementes of the bodye nor to eate and drynke with thē nor in their vesselles nor to lye in theyr couches nor weare any of theyr apparel except they be well sunned or wethered in the cleane ayer It is also good to flye from al pla●es that be corrupte or stynkyng and to kepe the stretes houses very swete and cleane And the rulers ought so to prouide that no filthy donge nor any deade caryons be cast into the stretes for that shulde sore enfecte the ayer bryng many mē to death And during al the time of this disease there ought to be no hote houses vsed but forbidden and locked vp tyl suche tyme they se no further daunger ¶ The second Chapter of eatyng and drynkyng THe meates oughte to be of very lyghte digestion more in somer then in winter hauing alwaye an eye vnto the cōplexions customes and other thinges aforesayde The houre what tyme ye shal receyue your meat is when your appetyte cūmeth vpon you after the fyrst digestiō made Great repletion ought to be abhorred but a sufficient meale is verye holsome Neither is diuersitie of meates alowed of anye phisike but yf ye wyll haue diuers sortes then beginne wyth them that are the lyghtest to digest and that best nourisheth y e bodye Your bread muste be of pure corne kept in good ayre and not fusty metely well salted with sufficient leuen baken in a place where none euyl ▪ aire is and it must be of a day or two daies olde or there about Wheate is beste among al other cornes euen as wyne amonge al other licours althoughe the ba●lye bread be good for them y t minde to kepe them leane Meates of euil taste after they be longe dead stynkyng fishe in lyke maner and the fattes of al fishes and meates that haue bene twise sodden thicke wyne and troublous or otherwyse corrupte waters of ma●ishes blacke groundes and al such corrupte meates drinkes be very peryllous But good wyne sauoury and cleare and good meates taken with an appetyte are cause of health and preseruation from the pestilence Vinegre is a noble thyng in tyme of
it is more easye I fynde that manye thynges haue a natural vertue against y e falling euill not of any qualitye elementall but by a singuler propertye or rather an influence of heauen whiche almyghtye god hathe geuen vnto thynges here in earth as be these and other Saphires smaragdes redde coral piony mystletow of the oke takē in the moneth of March and the moone decreasynge tyme sauein dylle and the stone that is founde in the bellye of a yong swallow being the first brood of the dame These or one of them hanged about the necke of the child saueth and preserueth it from the sayd sickenes Now wil I describe some good holsome medicines to be takē inward for thesame disease If the chylde be not very young the mawe of a leueret dronke with water and honye cureth thesame ¶ A medicine for the fallinge syckenesse Take the roote of pionye and make it into pouder and geue it to the childe to lycke in a litle pappe and suger They that are of age maye eate of it a good quantity at once and likewise of the blacke sedes of the same piony Item the purple violettes that creapeth on the ground in gardeines with a longe stalke and is called in englishe and fryed meates but abstaine from mylke and al maner fyshe And it shall be good for her to eat a lectuary made after this sorte Take nuntis cinamone cumine rose leaues dryed mastike fenugreke valerian ameos doronisi zedoarye cloues saunders and lignum aloes of euerye one a dramme muske half one drāme make an electuary with clarified hony and let her eat of it and geue the chylde as muche as halfe a nut euerye daye to swallow A plaister Take an ounce of waxe and a dramme of euphorbium at the potecaries and temper it with oyle olyue on the fyer and make a serecloth to coumforte the backe bone and the sinewes ¶ A goodly lauatorye for the same purpose Take lye of ashes and seeth therein baye buryes and asmuch piony sedes in a close vessel to the thyrde parte and washe the childe often with thesame Item a bathe of sauerye maiorym tyme sage nepte smallage mintes or some of them is verye good and holesome Also to rubbe the backe of the chylde and the limmes with oyles of roses and spyke myxte together warme and in stede of it ye mai take oyle of baies ¶ Of the crampe or spasmus THis disease is often sene amōg chyldren and commeth verye lyghtely as of debilytye of the nerues and cordes or elles of grosse humors that suffocate thesame the cure of y t whiche is declared of authours to bee doone by friccions and oyntmentes that comfort the sinowes dissolue the matter as oile of floure-deluyce with a litle anyse saffron and the rootes of pionie Item oyle of camomil fenugreke and mellilot● or the herbes soddē betony wormewood verueyne and tyme are exceding good to washe the chylde in Item the plaister of exphorbium written in the cure of palsey Of the stifnes or starknes of limmes SOmetime it happeneth ● the lymmes are starke ● can not well come together withoute the greater peyne whiche thyng● procedeth mani times of cold as whan a chylde is found in the frost or in the streete caste awaye by ● wycked mother or by som● other chaunce although I am not ignoraun● that it maye procede of manye other causes as it is sayde of Rasis and o● Arnolde de villa noua in his boke of the cure of infantes And here is to bee noted a wonderfull secret of nature manye tymes approued written of Auicenne in hy● fyrste Canon and of Celius Antiquarium electionū libro .xiii. capit .xxxvii ▪ that whan a mēber is vtterly benum 〈◊〉 and taken thorough colde so tha● the paciente cannot feele hys lymmes nor moue them accordynge to nature by reason of the vehement congelaciō of y e bloud in such case y e chiefest hel● or remedy is not to set them to the fyer to receiue heat for by that meanes lightly we se that eueri one swowneth and manye dye outeryghte but to sette the feete legges and armes in a payle of clere colde water whiche immediatly shal dissolue the congelaciō and restore the bloude to the former passage and fredome after that ye ma● lay the pacient in a bed to sweate and geue him hote drinke and caudels or a coleis of a capon hote with a litle cinamome saffrō to cōfort the hart An argument of this cure ye may se thus When an apple or a pere is frosen in the winter sette it to the fyer and it is destroyed but yf ye putte it into colde water it shall as well endure as it did afore whereby it doth appere that the water resolueth colde better with hi● moysture than the fyer can do by reason of his heate for the water relenteth and the fyer draweth and dryeth as affyrmeth Galene in hys booke o● elementes Hitherto haue I declined by occasion but I trust not in vayne to the reader now to my purpose When a yonge childe is so taken with a colde I esteme it best for to bath th● bodye in luke warme water wherei● hath bene sodden maiorim and time ● sope sage mintes suche other goo● and comfortable herbes thē to relieu● it with meates of good nourishment accordyng to the age and necessity and yf neede be when ye se the limmes y● to be starke make an oyntmente after this fourme ¶ An oyntment for styffe and stoyned limmes Take a good handefull of nettles and stampe them then seth them in oyle ● the thirde part in a double vessel kep● that oyntmēt in a drye place for it w● last a great while and is a singuler r●medy for the styfnes that commeth of cold whoso anoynteth hys handes fete with it in the morning shal not be grieued with colde al the daye after The sedes of nettles gathered in harueste and kepte for thesame entente is excedyng good sodden in oyle or fryed with swines grece which thing also is verye good to heale the kybes of heeles called in latin Perniones The vrine of a goate with the donge stamped and layed to the place resolueth the stifnes of limmes When the cause commeth not by extreme cold but of some other affeccion of the sinowes and cordes it is best to make a bath or a fomētaciō of herbes that resolue and comfort the sinowes with relaxacion of the grosse humors to open the pores as by exāple thus Take malowes holyhocke and dyl of eche a handful or two seth them in the water of netes fete or in broth of flesh without salt with a handful of branne ●nd comine in the which ye shall bath the chyld as warme as he may suffe● and yf ye see necessitie make a plaist● with the same herbes and lay it to th● griefe with a litle gosegrece or duck● grece or if it may be gotten oyle of c●momil of lylyes and of dyll
a halfe of oyle of roses the yolke of an egge and a quarter of an ounce of barly floure a litle saffron mixe all together put it betwene two linnen clothes and lay it to the peyne An other Take of crōmes of wheaten breade whyte an ounce and seeth it in nyght shade or morel water then myxe with the said bread .ii yolkes of egges oile of roses and camomil of eche an oūce and an halfe muscilage of lineseede an ounce and vse it as is aforesayd An other Take syxe leaues of henbane roste them then beate them verye wel in a morter and laye them to the peyne For rednes of the eyes In the begynnyng of the rednes laye vpō the eyes towe dypped in y e white of egges but let y e whites be wel beaten fyrste wyth rosewater or with plātayne water An other Take redde roses and seeth them and let them be set warme to your eie Thys taketh awaye spottes of bloud that sometyme chaunceth in the eyes Also it is good for al diseases of the eyes And it is good for rednes of the eies that commeth by stryking or any suche vyolence If at any time there happen a spot or blemishe in the eye by a stroke ye muste lay to it by by towe wet in rosewater and in whytes of egges and after that the peine be mitigate ye muste lay a playstre vpon the eye made of a rawe egge barlye floure and the iuyce or muscilage of mallowes and then yf the eye be not holpen of the sayd bloud ye must laye to it a plaster both dissolutiue defensiue and partlye appeysyng the peine which must be made of whete floure y e iuice of mallowes mintes smalach and the yolke of an egge Of hardenesse that hath bene long in the eye Take a scruple of aloes succotrine melt it in water of celydony at y e fyre then receyue the fume of it and afterwarde wash the eie with fenel water An other Take poudre of cumyne myxt wyth waxe lyke a plaistre and laye it vpon the eye An other Take red roses sage rue celedonie of eche a lyke muche with a lytle salte and distill a water and putte therof a drop or two in your eye euenyng and mornynge In steade of that water it is good to take iuyce of verueine rue and a lytle rosewater For all rednesse of the eyes Take the bygnesse of a nut of white copperose and a scruple of yeros and poudre it and mixt it with a glasse ful of well water then putte two or thre droppes in your eyes For the same Water of strawburies made and put in the eye is good A singuler poudre that dryeth and taketh awaye rednesse of the eyes TAke tutie preparat an oūce and timonie halfe an ounce perles two drammes red coral a dram and an halfe pouldre al these thinges verye fyne and kepe them in a box of tynne and vse it For to stoppe wateryng of the eyes MAke a plaister of poudre of mastike fyne frankensence boole armoniake and gūme dragagante with whites of egges myxte together layde to the foreheade tēples Also it is good to set ventoses on the nape of the necke Also it is good to make a co●rie to put into the eyes as foloweth Take tutie preparat the stone called lapis hematites of ech a drāme aloes halfe a drām perles and camphore of eche a scruple pouder them all very fine and myxe them in thre oūces of water distilled of the knoppes of rooses and thereof make a collirie Also for to stoppe al humoures descendyng to the eyes these thynges aforesayde are verye good myxte wyth rayne water wherin olibanum or frākenscence hath bene sodden ¶ For webbes of the eye IT maye bee casylye holpen in younge folkes but in aged persons it is veraye harde And in the begynnyng ye muste mollifye them with a decoction of the floures of camomyl mellilote cole leaues receiuyng the fume of the said decoction within the eyes and then put therin a litle pouder made with sugercandye sall gemme and egges shelles burnt and afterward distyl into them womans mylke with the decoction of fenugreke ¶ An other singuler receate for webbes in the eyes Take snayles with the shelles on and wash them eyght tymes and distil them ī a commune stillatory then take hares galles redde corall and sugercandye with the saide water dystylle them agayne and put euery mornyng and euenyng a droppe in your eye ¶ An other water This water is made of white coperose suger candy and rose-rosewater with whites of egges that are sodden hard all streyned through a linnen cloth put into your eye after diner and all nyght to bedwarde Regiment for them that haue any sore eyes Ye must alwaye kepe youre belly lose and abstayne from fyre smoke wynde dust and ouer hote or colde ayre frō wepyng and longe readyng of a small letter from ouer long watchyng ouer muche drinkyng of wyne and eatinge late for al these are very noisome to y e eyes and syghte Also all euaporatiue thinges as onions lekes garlike mustard pease and beanes are very daūgerous Ye must kepe your fete cleane and forbeare the daye sleape Beholde grene thynges cleare water precious stones and to kepe you from lōg holdyng downe youre face socoureth the syghte very muche and is verye good for the eyes Likewise vse meates of good quicke digestion as to eat senel often and after meat take coriander comfites prepa●ated and drinke not after them But aboue al kepe awai your handes for the rubbing of them maketh them worse and worse ¶ Remedie for dyseases of the eares TAke oyle of roses a litle vineger and put it into the eare thē make a bagge of camomill and mellilote and laye it thereunto ¶ For noyse and soundyng of the eares Take pullule cochie ▪ or fetide because the sounde procedeth of ventositye or of phlegme and before ye take the sayde pylles it is good to drynke thre ounces of fenell water .ii. houres before meat .iiii. or .v. dayes After the operacion of the sayd pylles ye muste dippe a tente in oyle of rue castor or of salte with the iuice of lekes and often in the mornyng fastynge to holde hys eare ouer the warme decoction of maiorim rue wormewood camomil and mellilote ¶ For peyne in the eares Gose grece wyth a lytle honye swageth the paynes of the eares ¶ Also the chestwormes sodden in oyle of roses vpon hoate asshes in the rynde of a pomegranate and dropped in the eares ¶ Item oyle of almondes specially of the bitter almondes hoate ¶ Item if there be water in the eares it shall bee hadde out with a litle gose grece and the iuyce of onyons ¶ Also earth wormes with gose grece soden is good for payne in the eares Item an adders haine sodden in wine and y e eare bathed in it a litle thereof put into the payne is good to take
Take diayris symple eat a lozeng of thesame at morne and also at night An other remedye for horcenesse of a long continuaunce Take raysons fygges suger cinamome and cloues of euery one a litle Seeth them in good wine of the which ye shal geue to drinke morning and eueninge .ii. ounces at a tyme except he hath a feuer For the same It is good to take morning and euenyng a sponeful of the syrupe of iu●bes myxte with a roote of liquirice in maner of aloc If with the sayd horcenes there descend aboundaūce of water to y e mouth it is good to make an electuarye of halfe diayris and halfe diadragantum and to vse it firste and last after perfumyng wyth stoupes of flaxe fumed with frankinsēce mastike sandrake and storax calamite laide vpon the head warme Remedye for the cough Take ysope great raysins and fygges of eche a litle handefull licorice one ounce boyle them in water til the thyrd part be wasted then geue it him for to drinke twyse a day in the morning two houres before meate and at nyghte one houre beefore supper and immediatlye after it is good to eate a lozenge of diayris or diapenidion If ye wil haue it stronger put to them in the decoction a lytle coole woortes anyse and fenell with the sedes of nettelles of eche two drammes An other remedie Take sugercandy white pilles dyayris diadragagant of euerye one .i. ounce licorice .ii. drāmes make a pou●er and let hym eate therof a sponful mornyng and euening and drinke after it three ounces of water of Isope or of scabious with suger or without suger In stede of those waters ye may take the broth of redde colewoortes wythout salte An other remedye Take sirupe of liquirice and of ysope and drinke it euen and morne wyth a ptisane or one of y e same sirupes with a sponefull of ptisane is good An other Take pouder of diayris simple and liquirice of eche a dramme weighte with foure ounces of suger make an electuarye to be eaten fyrste and laste and after meate An other It is good to take loc sanum with a stycke of liquirice at the coughynge and after meate And there is an other loc called loc de pino as good at all times as y e other is And it is good to annoynt the breast mornyng and euenynge wyth oyle of lylyes swete almons and maye butter without salt Here is to be noted that commonly y e coughe procedeth of colde humours that greueth the longes and for that cause all thynges the whiche be hote swete and do poruoke spittel are very good and holsome for thesame as bee the thynges afore rehearsed And sometyme it procedeth of heat thē it is knowē by the great alteration or feuer then ye must forbyd the pacient drinkyng of all wines and to vse the thinges y t hereafter foloweth Remedy against the coughe comming of a hote cause Take syrupe of violettes and of iuiubes and drynke thereof morninge eueninge with a litle ptisane sodden For thesame It is good to take fyrste and laste a lozenge of diadragagant afterward to drynke a draught of good ptisane A good receite agaynst the coughe Take the rote of Enula campana horehounde holihock of eche a lyke moch seeth them altogyther in white wyne wyth a dosen of fatte fygges a litle liquirice drinke of it a draught euerye daye twyse ¶ Regiment or dyet for them that haue the cough Ye must abstaine frō vinegre veriuce all salte meates frutes and rawe herbes fyshe lymons grosse meates and to muche repletion Also ye maye drinke no wyne betwene meales and beware of daye slepe and specially after meate The wynde the colde and much talkynge are verye vnnaturall for y e coughe and so is all laboure aswell of the bodye as of the mynde and some tyme it is good to holde your wynde● lytle and let it go agayne ¶ Remedyes agaynste shortnes of the wynde SHortnes of the winde procedeth often tymes of fleume that is coughe and clāmishe hangyng vpon y e longes or stopping the condites of y e same being in the holowenes of the breste or of catarrous humours y t droppeth downe into the longes and therby cōmeth straitnesse in drawing of the breth which is called of phisicions dispnoca or asthma when y e pacient can not bend his necke down for drede of suffocaciō it is called orthopnoca For euery one of these diseases ther be very holsome medicines declared here afore ¶ The receyte for Asthma Take an ounce of great raisins picked frō the kernelles two figges the meat of a date dry isope maydenhere licorice and the longes of a foxe wasshed in wyne water of scabiouse of euery one a dramme penidies .ii. oūces with sirup of licorice let al be ī corporated make a loc to eat a good while after meate wyth a sticke of lycorice ¶ An other receyte Take horehounde maydenhere and ysope of euery one a hādful liquirice dates fygges seed of smalache and of fenel of euery one half an ounce boile them in a pinte of water and an halfe tyl the thyrde parte be consumed After gyue hym the sayde decoccion to drinke a good draught euery morning two houres afore meat And before it or incōtinently after it it is good to take asmoche as a chesnut of conserue of colewortes or a lozeng of diaysopi or diairis Salomōis Also loc de pulmone vulpis is excedynge good for the sayde disease ¶ An ointmēt for shortnes of breath Take .ii. ounces of oile of swete almōdes one of maye butter vnsalted a lytle saffron and of newe waxe make an oyntment wherewyth ye shall annoynte the brest morne and euen ¶ Regiment Considering y e sayde disease commeth of to greate aboundaunce of fleume in the lōges it is good to obserue the thinges that are shewed in y e remedyes of the cough And to dwell in a dry place farre from water pooles or marishes and to slepe in a moyste chābre in the whyche ye muste haue a fyre of wood without smoke The bread must be light and pleasaunt for sour bread browne bread and crustes are to be auoided Also ye may eate no pease benes nuttes chestnuttes nor any thing that stoppeth or engendreth wynde Fysshe rosted vpon the grydyron may well be suffred for they be not so euil Hulled barly ryse broth of colewoortes and broth of an old cocke with Isope saffron are speciall good meate for the longes and so are fatte figges raysins of alican dates graynes of y e pyne pignolate and swete almondes Greate mouinges and chafynges and sodaine laboure is verye euyl yet moderat exercise afore meate is good and profytable Rennynge anger and such other passions that enflame y e hert are in thys case vtterly to be auoyded ¶ Remedyes for the pthisycke PThisis is an vlceration of the longes by the which al the body falleth into consūption in suche wyse that it wasteth al saue
pacient a smalle draught .ii or .iii. houres afore meate The fourth Chapiter of the weakenes of the harte WEakenesse or feblenes of harte is caused when the bodye fayleth his vertue vital wythout anye euidēt cause ▪ or whē the bodye is consumed waxeth out of coloure and that the operacions vitall are weake wythoute sensible hurtynge of any other mēbre but the harte And it maye chaunce of an aposteme for the whyche there is no maner remedy for al apostemacion ●f the harte is mortal And debilitye ●f the hart may come of heat accedental which one may knowe when there is great heat in the breast vehemēte thirst is quēched better in drawing cold ayre thē in drinking cold water Remedye Geue hym y t hath a feble hert redy to faint ether for feuer or for extreme heate the weyght of a frenche crowne of trosciske of cāphore with wyne of pomegranades laye vpon his breast towarde the lefte syde a sendal or linnen water of roses purcelane succorye sorelle Moreouer the paciēt ought to smel thynges colde and swete as dryed roses water lilies violettes and vinegre of roses Also it is good to take an infusion or laxe of rubarbe ordeyned of som good phisicion after the whyche it shall be good to applye vpon the lefte pappe a lynnen cloth dipped in plātaine water roses sorell and a lytle vinegre For tremblyng of the hart wythout a feuer a remedye The paciente muste take .ii. drammes of the electuary of diamargariton calidum and the thyrde part of electuarium de gemmis then drinke .ii. or .iii ounces of water of buglosse bawme mixt togyther An other remedye Take mastyke lignum aloes cloues cinamome nutmigges and cubebes of eche a scruple pilles of citrons halfe a dramme doronici romani and perles of ech .xv. graynes basile seede ten graynes amber grece and muske of ech two graines with cōserued buglosse or colewoorts and sucket of citrons of eche halfe an ounce make an electuarye wyth .iiii. ounces of suger dissolued in white wyne and buglosse water and vse of thesame euery mornyng .ii. drammes and drynke a lytle good wyne after it ¶ Another remedy Take water of buglosse bawme and borage of all three together a pounde of white wine halfe a pounde pouder of cinamome cloues and nutmigges of eche two drammes mingle them al wel together and then heate it a litle and dippe a linnen cloth in it or elles a scarlet and laye it to the left pappe ¶ Another remedye Ye muste make a bagge of sendalle of the sayde swete spices or other cordyall pouders and laye it hoote vpon the left pappe ¶ Another remedye Take pomaunders made of lapdanum lignum atoes and citron pilles maces cloues borage floures storax calamite amber of grece and a lytle waxe and lette the pacient beare that and smell it often ¶ An other medicine The mawe of an olde cocke dried and made in pouder is excedyng good to drinke in red wyne or swete wine with a litle saffron For thesame It is good to drinke euery morning thre oūces of water of buglosse wherin hath bene sodden cloues And it is good to drynke in a mornyng .iii. oūces of iulep made of halfe a pounde of bawme water and thre oūces of suger The confection of diaiacincthi is singuler and excellent for tremblinge of the hearte but it is for noble men not for poore folke ¶ For swownyng SWownyng is a takyng awaye of the feelyng and mouing of the body by weakenes of the heart thorough to much auoidans of y e spirites ¶ Remedye In somer for sownyng sodainelye ye oughte to caste into hys face colde water myngled with rosewater or vinegre And yf ye stoppe hys mouthe and nose and bowe hys face vnto hys knees so long as ye stoppe your wynd your selfe ye shall foorthwith recouer hym But yf the sayde swownynge come of the mother ye muste laye to the nose all stynkyng thynges and abhominable sauours as partriches fethers brente castor and assafetida or the snuffes of candelles Moreouer ye ought to geue the pacient a litle good wyne whiche is the chiefe thyng that quicklyest restoreth hym as sayeth Auerrois in his seuenth colliget Afterwarde rubbe hys armes and legges and bynde them harde then prouoke hym to nese puttynge a litle pouder of longe pepper euphorbium or castor into hys nose And yf by the saide medicines the pacient dothe not amende this disease is vncurable And here ye maye note that yf swowning come by great resoluciō of spirites as after great euacuaciō other by swette fluxe of bloud or laxe ye ought not to caste cold water on his face nor to bind his mēbers for y t shoulde do hī hurt but kepe him in a place withoute mouing and geue him to drinke a litle good wyne nourishe him with good light metes as pullettes chickins capons partriches veale mutton kid Whereof ye may make him good porrege coleyses or restoratiues distilled or otherwise as ye shal thīke cōueniēt ¶ The .v. Chapter of remedies for dyseases of the stomake THe cheste of the body doth receiue the meate necessarye for all the mēbers in the stomake whiche is situate in the myddes of the bodye for to digeste thesame meat into al y e members to the which chaūceth debilitie or hīderaūce of appetite sometimes by error of y e eater in qualitie or quantitye sometimes by reasō of the fleume that descendeth from the heade like a reume ¶ Remedye Keepe abstinence and eate soberlye light meates and drinke good wine and but litle Purge the stomake ī takynge pylles of symple hyera beefore meate .iii. or foure of the said pilles at foure of the clocke in the mornyng If the repletion be greate slepyng in the nyght he muste laye hys hande on hys stomake or els laye a litle pillowe of fethers on it or a bagge of wormwod margerim Sometimes ther chaunceth suche debilitye not for reume or meate or drinke but by viscouse slymy fleume ī the mouth of y e stomake which causeth to engender aboūdaūce of ventositye and maketh the meat to swymme with litle thirste And sometimes with sour belchinges and inflations such debilitye maye not perfectlye bee cured but for a tyme mended wyth the remedies that folowe ¶ Remedyes for weakenes of the stomake Fyrst ye must take pillule stomatice ii or .iii. houres afore meate more or lesse accordyng to y e quantitye of the fulnes of the stomake after geue him euery mornyng .ii. houres afore meat and one houre after supper at euerye tyme a lozenge of a lectuary called diagalāga or an other called diaciminō whiche lectuaries do consume ventosities and with theyr cōfortable heat driue away the colde and the windye complexion of the stomake ¶ For the same Grene ginger is verye good taken as is sayd afore of electuaries And it is holesome to eate afore your meate anyse sedes and fenel and when ye begin to eate take a tost
warme water vp to y e hanches yf the peyne come of cold ye must annoīt his belly with oyle of bayes and gosegrese For the wyndy colyke If it be winde make a glister of new milke wyth a lytle oyle and the yolke of an egge for it is very good Also it is good to lette him drynke a dramme of hiera picra simplex wyth .ii. ounces of water of cardo benedictus or purcelane or wormewood and to make a plaister of leeke leaues fryed in oile vinegre and layed vpon the bellye Lyke warde the backe Also nephretica is paynefuller afore meat the colicke is euer more greuous after And often y e colicke chaūceth sodenlie but nephretica cōtrarie for commonlye it commeth by litle litle for euermore before one shal fele paine of the backe with difficultie of vrine Item there is more difference for the colicke sheweth vrynes as it were coloured but nephretica in the begynning is cleare and whyte like water and after waxeth thycke and then appeareth in the botome of the vessel lyke red sande or grauel Remedie for peyne of the reynes YE muste vse thynges aperitiue to cause you make water but afore ye ought to loce y e belly in taking an ounce of cassia an houre before meate ▪ but yf your bellie he hard bound ye must take a glister made as hereafter foloweth ▪ before ye take th● sayde c●ssi● A glister for nephretica passio Take of march mallowe rootes two ounces mallowes violettes beetes march mallowe leaues floures of camomylle and mellilote of eche a hādfull melon seede and anyse seede of eche halfe an ounce wheat branne an handful and decocte it and take therof halfe a pounde and distemper in it an ounce of cassia an ounce of course suger .ii. ounces of oyle of violettes an ounce of oyle of lilies make a glyster In stede thereof ye maye take cowes mylke wyth two egge yolkes in maner of a glyster And it is to be noted that in suche a disease the glystre muste be greate in quantitie or els ye shulde make wrestynge and roumblyng in the bellye whiche shulde be an occasion of more ●aine After this operaciō if the paine be not apeased ye must gyue another glister after the operaciō of which the patiēt ought to go into some bath vp● to the nauyl wherein muste be sodden mallowes marche mallowes beetes pellitary lyneseed fenugreke floures of camomil with mellilote al put in a bagge in the sayd water ●ubbe hym wyth it and at hys goyng out of the sayd bath ye must take two oūces of sirupe of mayden heare radishe with iii. ounces of the decoccion of lyquirice Moreouer after the sayde bath ye muste ●aye vpon the paine a ●ultes made of herbes and floures with one of almondes being in y e said bagge .ii or iii. mornīges take ▪ v. or ●i ounces of y e broth of cicers sodden wyth lycorice or els drinke water of ●itory of ●esses or of rotes aperi● the which waters are very good for to purge the grauel and the stone ▪ 〈…〉 a verye good electuary for the skins ▪ ●alled electuarium ducis or iustinum philantropos or liontripon yf one take a drāme or two after opera●ion of a glister or o● cassia or a pille 〈◊〉 ante cib● and after to drinke o●e of the sayde waters or elles a litle white wyne warmed ¶ Regiment aswel for the colyke as for the reynes of the backe HE muste flye frō al euil qualities of the ayre as wynde raine great heate and greate colde speciallye to kepe him from warming the r●nes agaynst the fyre nor to heate it by any other meanes Also he muste abstaine from great repletion at one meale and to long abstinence from meate for all these ●ille the body ful of yl humours Also sleape not on the daye specially after meate nor lye not on the romes when ye are aslepe And ye ought to eate no ●alt●ysh no● no b●efe nor other grosse meates Lik● wise one ought for to beware 〈…〉 ●o●les bredde vp in the water spice●● pastrye and bread not very wel leuen●d ▪ specially tartes cakes other pasti● made of floure But aboue al ye muste bewar of white meates as milke chese rawe frutes hard egges as moch as is possible kepe your selfe frō yre enuye melancoly other lyke affecciōs For the fluxe of the wombe IN al fluxes of the ●elly cause y e excremētes to be dulye serched for yf the disease be suche that the meat commeth out euen as it was receiued or not half digested y e sayde fluxe is called lienteria Yf great aboundaūce of watery humours haue theyr issue by lowe the sayde fluxe is named diarthea which is as moch to saye as fluxe humorall And yf bloode or matter appeare with the excrementes in the syckenesse then they call it dissenteria which is a gret disease and a daungerous for to cure Remedy for the fluxe lienteria ▪ FOorasmuch as this flux commeth for y e most part of great debilitie of vertue retētiue of y e stomacke for y e great moistnes of y e same it is good to gyue y e sirupe of wormwood honye of roses takīg of it with a spone or drynke th● wyth the water of betonye fenel and wormewood and yf it so be the paciente doe desyre to vomyte it wold be good for hym or let him take halfe an ounce of hiera simple wyth two ounces of water of wormwood and yf the pacient be strong ynough adde therto two drammes of diafinicon And after thys ye muste comforte the stomake wyth oyle of mastyke spike mynt wormwood or nardine or with a playster called cerotū Galeni spred vpon lether and after layed vpon the stomake or make a bagge of wormewood myntes and maiorim dried laye it vpon the stomake In the mornyng take a lozenge of aromaticum rosatum and a lytle rinde of citron cōfit and before euery meale take a morsel of conserua quynces Remedy for the fluxe humoral called diarthea THe sayde fluxe oughte not to be restrayned afore the .xiiii. daie yf nature be not very moch enfebled And somtyme it cōmeth of hote causes as of cholere and then one ought to giue vnto the pacient to drynke afore hys meate syrupe of ribes syrupe of roses or syrupe of quinces wyth smythes water and in y e stede of those sirupes ▪ ye maye make a iulep thus A iulep for the fluxe humorall Take rosewater buglosse and plantayne euerye one halfe a pounde of al the saunders two drammes and with a quartrō and an halfe of sugre make a iulep In the mornīg two houres afore meat it is good to giue the paciēt olde conserue of roses or a dramme of trociskes of roses after he hath dronke one of the sayde syrupes or of iulep of roses wyth a lytle of smythes water wherof the pacient ought to drynke at euery tyme when he is a thyrst Yf in the
nature For yf it bee once settled at the hert I affirme plainely ther is no hope at al. Yet there be some fooles that tarye tyl the twelueth houre or the foure twentye after the infeccion and they boost them selues that they wil heale the pacient but that is a manifest a a shameful errour for yf any by chaūce is so recouered it commeth of God not of any medicine for where as one so escapeth an hundred other perisshe Notwithstandyng yf the case so be that ye be not called or can gette no remedy afore the said time caste not your selfe into dispayre or put not the paciēt in discomfort take or giue your medicine in y e name of God and yf ye can not brooke it take asmuch agayn and do so many tymes til ye maye retayne it thē lay ye downe to sweate and lyft vp your hert to God callinge vpon hym without whom there is no helth and by the grace of Iesu ye nede not to be feareful of death for that y e is impossible to man is easye ynough with God yea many times nature worketh it selfe aboue al natural expectaciō But I counsaill at the firste begynnyng to receyue the medicines when any of the forsayde signes appeareth or when ye fele your selfe diseased for the venyme perceth soner to the herte of the cholerike thē either of the sanguyne or the melancholyke although the sanguynes are apter to infeccion then the other are chefelye yf the sycknesse be in somer They that are of melancholy be not lyghtly taken but in case they be thē the cure is very daūgerouse and hard Therefore I saye take heede at the beginnyng as the prouerbe is Prīcipiis obsta sero medicina paratur Lū mala per longas inualuere moras Take the medicine quickely and let thy selfe bloud and remember god the phisicion of thy soule and withoute doubt thou shalt well inough recouer Nowe we haue declared the signes by whiche ye maye easily know whan a person is infected and wee sayde it was conueniente to take the medicyne as soone as anye of them appeareth without any longer tarying afore the venime commeth to the hearte here wee wyll enfourme you howe ye shall perceiue whether the saide venime bee setled in the hearte or no. Take a dramme of bole armeny made in pouder accordyng to the doctrine of y e last chapter in the first part and if ye can not get it take some other excellēt medicine against y e pestilence namely one of the receites that shall bee sayde hereafter and geue it to y e pacient but there can nothyng be better then the foresaide pouder yf ye haue it at hand Take I saye thereof one dramme an ounce of white wyne and odoriferous with two ounces of water of roses mingle them and geue them to the pacient The blacke receit declared in the Chapter of preseruatiues maye be wel vsed in stede of the bole And yf he maye retayne the drynke within his stomake it is a good signe that the venime was not at the hearte afore he toke the medicine and therefore he may be let bloude wel inough But yf the pacient cannot broke the saide drinke but cast it vp and vomite then ye maye be sure that the venyme hath bene at y e heart afore y e medicine Therfore by and by wash his mouth with wine or with water of scabious of sorel or of roses and it ought to be very wel mundified and clensed Then geue hym an other dose of the said drinke and heat a cruste of bread and holde it to his nose that he maye the better kepe the foresayd pocion ▪ And if the seconde tyme he caste it vp againe and is not able to reteine it wash his mouth as is saide before and geue it him the thyrde tyme with a litle vineger that it may perce the better and so .vi. or .vii. times if he do not holde it geue it hym agayne and then whether he retayneth it or retayneth it not by and by ye ought to lette hym bloude But in case the paciente were infected xxiiii houres afore ye geue the drinke neuer let him bloud for y e can nothing helpe him but rather make him feble but administer a medicine ordeyned for the pestilence as is sayde afore or such as shalbe spoken of hereafter and that done prouoke hym to sweate Nowe to oure purpose as concernyng dyet ¶ The seconde Chapter of the cure of pestilence by the waye of dyet FYrst as soone as euer the paciēt feleth himselfe infected it is verye good to auoid y e corruptaire by chaunginge into some other place or els if he can not so let him rectifye the ayre of his own house or of his chamber with water of roses and vineger or els with fumigacions as is spoken of before according to the quality of y e time the cōplexion of his own body Moreouer it is good for him to shiften his bedde out of one chamber into another and from that to the fyrste agayne the nexte daye euer rectifying the ayre of them both as is aforesaid And as touchynge meat and drinke he ought not to abstaine or yet to take anye superfluities for to eate good meates measurablye thoughe it be against his stomake yet in this disease it shall doe him muche good Let him eate the brothe of chickens capons or coleyses of rabbettes and suche lyke meates with a litle sorell sauce or vyneger rosewater or wine of pomegranades yf they maye be gotten or wyne of barberyes and suche other If ye wyl haue other kynde of sauces or a pouder to strowe vpon youre meate ye may make it after this sort Take graynes of paradise whyte dyptanye of eche an ounce fine poudre of cinamome and cloues of eche halfe an ounce make them al in pouder and mingle it with suger In this disease ye maye eate no quesye meates as eles gese duckes and other suche as bee euyll I call them euyll meates whych accordyng vnto Galene De differentiis febrium are eyther euil of theyr owne nature or els if thei be naturallye good yet by reason of some putrefaction are as muche or more vnholsome as the other are partelye so because of longe kepynge vncleane and naughty dressyng or when thei be laied vp in a filthye or stinking place and partly by some yl infeccion when thei were aliue for he that vseth such kind of meates is oftentimes accoumbred with manye naughtye sycknesses as corrupte pestilencial feuers scabbes pustles lepries and other euyll infirmytyes All fyshe in this case are to be auoided Brothe or gruell made with borage buglosse endiue succorye sorell purcelane and other like herbes with a litle saffron and cleane wheat floure or the crommes of breade in a broth of chickyns or without a broth maye be wel administred Potched egges also with sorell sauce and cinamome vineger rosewater are meruelous good in this case And yf the heate be very
of it in a childe are many for it may come of very lyghte occasions as of greate cryeng stopping the breathe byndyng to strayghte or by a fal or of to greate rockyng and such lyke may cause the filme that spreadeth ouer the bally to breake or to slacke and so the guttes fall downe into the cod which yf it be not vtterly vncurable may be healed after thys sorte Fyrste laye the paciente so vpon his backe that hys heade maye be lower than his heales than take and reduce the bowels with youre hande into the due place afterwarde ye shall make a playster to be layde vpon the coddes and bounde with a lace round aboute the backe after this fourme Take rosin frankynsence mastyke comyne lyneseed anyse seed of euery one a lyke pouder of osmonde rootes that is to saye of the brode ferne y e .iiii. parte of al make a plaister with sufficient oyle olyue and fresshe swynes grece and sprede it on a lether and let it cōtinue except a great necessity two or thre wekes after that applye an other lyke tyll ye see amendment In thys case it is verye good to make a poudre of the heares of an hare to temper it with sugre or conserua roses and giue it to the child twies euery daye If it be aboue the age of .vii. yere ye may make a singuler receyte in drinke to be taken euerye daye twyse thus ¶ A drynke for one that is brosten Take matfelon daysies comfery and osmundes of euerye one a lyke seet them in the water of a smythes forge to the third part in a vessel couered o● a softe fyer than strayne it and giue to drynke of it a good draughte at ones mornyng and euenynge addyng euermore in his meates and drinkes the pouder of the heare of an hare beynge dryed ¶ Of fallyng of the fundament MAny times it happeneth that the gut called of the latīes rectum intestinū falleth out at the fūdament can not be gotten in againe wythoute peyne and labour whiche disease is a common thynge in children comming oftentimes of a sodayne cold or a long laxe and maye well be cured by these subscribed medicines If the gutte hath ben longe out and be so swollen that it cānot be reposed or by coldnes of the ayre be congeled the best counsell is to let the child sit on a hote bathe made of the decoccion of mallowes holihocke lineseed and the rootes of lyllyes wherin ye shall bathe the fundamente wyth a softe cloute or a sponge and whan the place is suppled thruste it in agayne whiche done than make a pouder thus ¶ A pouder for fallyng of the foundament Take the poudre of an hartes horne brent the cuppes of acornes dried rose leaues dryed goates clawes brent the rinde of a pomegranate and of galles of euerye one a portion Make them in pouder and strowe it on the fundament It shal be the better yf ye put a lytle on the gutt afore it be reposed in y e place after it be setled to put more of it vpon the fūdament than binde it in with hote lynnen clothes and gyue the childe quynces or a rosted warden to eate with cinamome and suger ¶ An other good pouder for the same Take galles myrre frankensence mastike and aloes of euery one a litle make them in a pouder and strowe it on the place A lytle tarre with gosegrese is also very good in this case ¶ An other good remedye Take the wolle from betwenethe legges or of y e necke of a shepe which is full of sweate and fattie than make a iuce of vnsette leekes and dippe the wolle in it and laye it to the place as whotte as may be suffered and whan it waxeth cold remoue it and apply an other hote this is a very good remedy for fallynge of the fundament If the chylde prouoke many tymes to seege and can expell nothynge that dysease is called of the Grekes tenesmos for the whiche it shall be verye good to apply a playster made of gardeine cressis a comine in lyke quātitye frye them in butter and laye it on the bellye as hote as he maye suffer It is also commended to fume the nether partes with turpentine and pitch and to sit longe vpon a bourd of ceder or iuniper as maye be possible ¶ Chafyng of the skynne IN the flankes armeholes vnder the eares it chaunceth often times that the skynne fretteth ether by the childes own vryne or for the defaute of washyng or els by wrappyng and kepyng to hote Therefore in the begynnyng ye shall annoint the places with freshe capons grece then yf it wyll not heale make an oyntment and laye it on the place ¶ An oyntment for chafyng and gallyng Take the roote of the floure deluyce dryed of redde roses dryed galingale and mastike of eche a lyke quantytye beate them into moste subtyle pouder than with oyle of roses or of lineseede make a soft oyntment Item the longes of a wether dryed and made in very fyne pouder healeth al chafynges of the skinne and in lyke maner the fragmentes of shomakers lether brent and cast vpon the place in as fine pouder as is possible hath the same effecte whiche thing is also good for the galling or chafing of the fete of whatsoeuer cause it commeth Item beane floure barly floure and the floure of fitches tempered with a lytle oyle of roses maketh a soueraine ointment for the same entent If the chafinges be great it is good to make a bath of holihocke dyll violets and lineseede with a litle branne than to washe thesame places oftentymes and lay vpon the sore some of thesame thinges The decoction of plantaine bursa pastoris horsetaile and knot-grasse is exceadynge good to heale all chafynges of the skynne ¶ Of smal pockes and measilles THis disease is common famil●er called of y e grekes by the general name of exanthemata and of P●●nie papule et pituite erupciones notwithstanding y e cōsent of writers hath obteined a distinctiō of it in .ii. kindes that is to saye varioli the measils and morbilli called of vs the smal pockes They bee bothe of one nature and procede of one cause sauinge that the measils are engendred of the inflāmacion of bloude and the small pockes of the inflammacion of bloude myngled with cholere The sygnes of them bothe are so manyfeste to syghte that they nede no farther declaracyon for at the fyrste some haue an ytche and a freting of the skynne as yf it hadde bene rubbed wyth nettles payne in the heade and in the backe the face redde in coloure and flecked feare in the sleepe greate thyrst rednesse of the eyes beatynge in the temples shotynge and pryckyng thorough all the bodye then anone after when they breake out they bee sene of dyuers fashions and fourmes sometimes as it were a drye scabbe or a lepry spredyng ouer all the members other whiles ī pushes pimples and
to the fyre in consuming Wherefore the remedies y t are good for burning are also very holesome here ī this case And fyrste the grene ointment of herbes described in y e chapter of itche is of good effect also in this cure more ouer y e medicines y t are here described Take at the pothecaries of vnguentū Galeni an ounce and an halfe oyle of roses two ounces vnguenti populeon one ounce y e iuce of plantain nightshade one ounce or more the whites of iii. egges heat thē altogether ye shal haue a good ointmēt for the same purpose An other Take earthwormes and stampe them in vineger then annoint the grefe euery two houres Item y e donge of a swan or in lacke of it the donge of a gose stamped with the whyte and yolke of an egge is good Item doues donge stamped in salet oyle or other is a singuler remedy for the same purpose Of burnyng and scalding FOr burning and scalding whether it be with fier water oile leade pytch lime or any suche infortune Ye must beware ye set no repercussiue at y e fyrst that is to saye no medicine of extreme colde for that might chaunce to driue the feruēt heat into the sinowes and so stoppethe poores that it could not issue whereof should happen much inconuenience in a great burnyng but in smal it coulde not be so daungerous wherfore y e best is when ye see a member eyther brent or scalded as is sayde afore Take a good quantitie of brine which is made of water and salt not to excedyng eyger or stronge but of a meane sharpnes and with a clout or a sponge bathe the member in it colde or at the least bloud warm thre or foure houres together the longer the better For it shall asswage muche of the peine open the pores cause also the fyer to vapour and geue a great comfort to the weake member Thē annoint the place with one of these medicines Take oyle of roses one parte swete creme two partes hony halfe a parte make an oyntment and vse it Item all the medicines described in the last chapter are of greate effecte in this case likewyse the grene ointment made of water betonye Item a soueraine medicine for burnynge and scaldynge and all vnkynde heates is thus made Take a dosen or more of hard rosted egges and put the yolkes in a pot on the fyer by thē self without licour styrre them and braye them with a strong hand tyll there aryse as it wer a froth or spume of oyle to the mouth of the vessell then presse the yolkes and reserue the licour this is called oile of egges a very precious thyng in the foresayde cure Moreouer ther is an oyntment made of sheepes dounge fryed in oyle or in swines grece than putte to it a litle waxe and vse it Also take quicke lime and washe it in veriuce .ix. or .x. tymes than mingle it with oile kepe it for thesame entent Item the iuyce of the leaues of lylyes v. partes and vineger one parte hony a lytle maketh an excellent medicine not onely for this entent but for al other kynd of h● and runnyng vlcers Note that w●●tsoeuer ye vse in thys case it must be laid vnto bloud warm Also for auoydyng of a scarre kepe the sore alwaye moyste with medicine ¶ Of kybes The kybes of y e heeles are called in latyne perniones they procede of cold are healed with these subscribed remedies A rape rote rosted wyth a litle fresh butter is good for the same gryefe Item a dosen figges sodden stamped with a lytle goosegrece is good Earth wormes sodden in oyle hath the same effecte Item the skinne of a mouse clapped a● hote vpon y e kibe with the heare outwarde and it shoulde not be remoued durynge ●ii dayes ¶ A playster for a kybed heele Take newe butter oyle of roses hennes grece of ech an oūce put the butter and the grece in a bygge rape rote or in lacke of it in a greate apple or onion whan it is rosted softe braye it with the oyle laye it playsterwyse vpon the kybe ¶ An oth● Take the 〈◊〉 of apples and rapes rosted on the coses of eche .iii. ounces freshe butter .ii. ounces duckes grese or swannes grece an ounce stamp thē all in a morter of leade yf it maye be had or els grynde them on a fayre marble and vse it ¶ Of consumpcion or leanesse WHan a child cōsumeth or waxeth leane withoute anye cause apparaunt there is a bathe cōmended of authours to wasshe y e childe many times is made thus Take the head and feete of a wether seeth thē til the bones fal a sunder vse to bath y e child in this licour and after annointe hym wyth thys ointmente folowing Take butter without salt oile of roses and of violettes of eche .i ounce the fat of rawe porke halfe an ounce waxe a quarteron of an ounce make an ointmēt wherwith the child must be rubbed euery daye twyse this with good fedinge shall encrease his strength by the grace of God ¶ Of gogle eyes THis impedimēt is neuer healed but in a very yong child euen at the beginning whervnto there is appointed no manner kind of medicine but only an order of kepyng that is to saye to laye the chylde so in his cradelle that he maye beholde directe agaynste the light not to turne his eies on either of bothe sydes If yet he beginne to gogle than set the cradell after suche a fourme that the light maye be on the contrary side that is on the same syde frō whence he turneth his eies so that for desyre of light he may dyrect them to the same part so by custome bring them to y e due fashion and in the night there ought to be a candel set in lykewyse to cause him to behold vpon it remoue his eies from y e euil custome Also grene clothes yelowe or purple are very good in this case to be set as is said afore Furthermore a coyfe or a biggē stonding out besides his eies to constraine the sight to beholde directe forwarde Of lyce SOmtimes not only chyldrē but also other ages are annoyed with lyce they procede of a corrupt humour and are engendred within y e skynne crepīg out alyue thorough the poores which yf they beginne to swarme in exceding numbre that disease is called of the grekes Phthiryasys whereof Herode dyed as is writtē in the actes of apostles among the Romaines Scilla which was a great tyraunt and many other haue ben eaten of lice to deathe whiche thing whā it happeneth of the plage of god it is past remedy but yf at procedeth of a natural cause ye may wel cure it by the meanes folowynge Fyrste let the paciente abstayne from al kynde of corrupt meates or y e brede fleume and among other ●ygges and dates must in this case be vtterly abhorred Thā make a lauatory to wash and