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A93039 The midwives book, or, The whole art of midwifry discovered. Directing childbearing women how to behave themselves in their conception, breeding, bearing, and nursing of children in six books, viz. ... / By Mrs. Jane Sharp practitioner in the art of midwifry above thirty years.; Midwives book Sharp, Jane, Mrs. 1671 (1671) Wing S2969B; ESTC R203554 186,081 442

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from the Liver to the veins about the womb but those veins and vessels being very narrow and not yet open if the blood be stopt in that it cannot break forth it will corrupt and runs back again by the passages of the hollow vein and great Artery to the Liver the heart and the Midriff and stops the whole body which may be easily known for their faces will look green and pale and wan they have trembling of the heart pains of the head short breathing the arteries in the back the neck and the Temples will beat very thick and though not alwayes yet sometimes they will fall into a Feaver by reason of these corrupt humours but it is alwayes almost attended with disgust and loathing of good nutriment and longing after hurtful things The whole Body especially the Belly legs and thighs swelling with abundance of naughty humours the Hypocondriacal parts are extended by reason of the menstrual blood runing back to the greater vessels and they are much given to vomit but all these signs are not found in all persons alike but they are common to most and in some you shall find all these meet The cause is the Terms stopt and from thence ill humours abound for when the natural channel is stopt the blood must needs return to the great vessels whence it came and choak them up and so spoil the making of blood nothing but raw and corrupt humors are bred which can never turn to good nutriment or be ever perfectly joyned to the parts of the body the blood is flegmatick slimy stuff and sometimes it is bred from corrupt meats and drink that maids will long after as well as Childing women they will be alwayes eating Oatmeal scrapings of the wall earth or ashes or chalk and will drink Vinegar they are strangly affected with an inordinate desire to eat what is not fit for food whereupon their natural heat is choaked and their blood turns to water their body grows loose and spongy and they grow lazy and idle and will hardly stir their pulse beats little and faint as the vapours fly to several parts so they are ill affected by them the heart faints the head is dried and pained and the animal actions are hurt when melancholy is mixed with the humours in too great proportion Sometimes this white Feaver turns to a Dropsie or the liver grows hard like a stone that it can make no blood some fall dead suddenly when the heart is choaked by ill vapours and humours flying to it if the stomach be affected the danger is the greater but if onely the womb be out of frame the remedy is much more easy The best time of the year to cure Maids and those that are sick of the green sickness is the spring and the way of cure is to heat the cold humours and make the thick gross blood thin and this cannot be all performed by one work to draw away and to correct the whole mass of humours at once wherefore you must purge gently and often mingling things that heat and attenuate as well as purgatives to carry the ill humours forth But first it will be good to give a Glister and next to open a Vein in the foot or ancle Moreover your physick must vary according to the parts of the body that are most stopt and where the humors float If they lye above the stomach and mesentery then vomit if you find the Person fitted for vomit likewise the Spleen or liver or womb must be respected in their several kinds with Physick accordingly and to save you the labour of much reading and me of writing too often of the same thing under several heads you may find what is to be done almost in all respects where I write of the stopping of the Terms and by this rule I wish the Reader to apply the rest when he stands in need which he can never well do as I said till he have some judgement in it and then it will become familiar to him But in this Disease principally for the cure respect the Liver the Spleen and the Mesentery or Midriff for these are certainly obstructed and must be opened and above all be sure to keep a sparing diet and of a thin substance Secondly Let blood in the arm first though the courses be stopt and after that in the foot If the disease be of long standing you shall do well to give a gentle Purge First of all to purge the humours as Take powdered Rhubarb two drams Chicory and Anniseed-water three ounces apiece Infuse the Rhubarb all night then let them boyl one walm onely and then strain it forth and in the strained liquor dissolve sirrup of Damask Roses one ounce and a half Diacassia half an ounce Cinnamon-water half an ounce five grains of Diagridium let her drink it in the morning Next after this use opening decoction of Succory and Madder and Liquorish roots of each half an handful Anniseeds and Fennel seeds two drams a piece a handful of Harts-tongue Leaves Borrage Flowers and pale Roses of each half a handful one ounce of the roots of Sassafras stoned Rasins one ounce and a half and half a dram of Cinnamon Boyl all these in Fountain water to a third part onely wasted and then sweeten it with sirrup of Lemmons she may drink it when she pleaseth An Electuary made of the rob or pulp of Elder-berries boyl'd to a just substance four ounces with one ounce of bay berries dried and powdered two Nutmegs and one dram of burnt-hartshorn half a scruple of Amber and four scruples of species Diarrhoda mingled all with sirrup of Succory one ounce and half is excellent And finally it will not be from the purpose but very useful to anoint the womb and Liver with such Oyntments as will open their obstructions made with Oyl of Spike and bitter Almonds of each two ounces and juyces of Rue and Mugwort half as much and Vinegar a fourth part waste the watery part of these by boiling then add Spikenard Camels Hay Roots of Asarum of each one dram Cypress half a dram Wax sufficient to make an Unguent To provoke the Termes And that is effected with one ounce of the Five opening Roots and with Madder Elecampane Orris Roots Eryngo dried Citron Pills and Sarfa of each half an ounce Germander Mugwort Agrimony of each a handful two small handfuls of Savin an ounce of wilde Saffron seeds two ounces of Senna Agarick and Mechoachan of each half an ounce two Pugils of Stoechas Flowers of Galingal Anniseeds and Fennel of each two drams Boil all this to a Pint and half sweeten it for your Pallat and add to it a spoonful of Cinnamon water Quercetans Pills of Tartar and Gum Amoniacum are commended Take of each half a dram Spike a scruple three drops of Cinnamon Extract of wormwood half a scruple take a scruple or twenty grain weight in pills an hour before Meat Conserve of Marigold Flowers is very good Some after good
from cold and that nothing get in to offend the womb some call this the womans modesty for they are a double door like Flood-gates to shut and open the neck of the womb ends in this and it is as it were a skinny addition for covering of the neck answering to the foreskin of a Mans yard These Lips which make the fissure of the outward orifice are long soft of a skinny and fleshy substance in some kind spongy and like kernels with a hard brawny fat under them and they are covered with a thin skin but in those women that are married they lye lower and smoother than in maids when maids are ripe they are full of hair that grows upon them but they are more curled in women than the hair of Maids They that have much hair and very young are much given to venery The wings appear when the Lips are parted and they are made of soft spongy flesh and the doubling of the skin placed at the sides of the neck these compass the Clitoris and are like a Cocks Comb. These wings besides the great pleasure they give women in Copulation are to defend the Matrix from outward violence and serve to the orifice of the neck of the womb as the foreskin doth to a mans Yard for they shut the cleft with lips as it were and preserve the womb from cold air and all injuries and they direct the Urine through the large passage as between two walls receiving it from the bottom of the cleft like a Tunnel and so it runs forth in a broad stream and a hissing noise not so much as wetting the wings of the Lap as it goes along and therefore these wings are called Nymphs because they joyn to the passage of the Urine and the neck of the womb out of which as out of Fountains whereof the Nymphs were called Goddesses water and humours do flow besides in them is all the joy and delight of Venus Those parts that are seen without are the Lips the slit and the groin but so soon as the Lips are divided there are three slits to be seen the greatest is the outmost and is first seen and there are two less slits between the wings which serve to close up the parts the more firmly But that which is the great and long slit is made by the Lips and bends backward toward the Fundament from the share-bone downward toward the slit of of the buttocks and the more backward it goes the deeper and broader it is and so it makes a trench like a Boat and ends in the welt of the orifice of the neck of the womb The Clitoris is a sinewy hard body full of spongy and black matter within it as it is in the side ligaments of a mans Yard and this Clitoris will stand and fall as the Yard doth makes women lustfull and take delight in Copulation and were it not for this they would have no desire nor delight nor would they ever conceive Some think that Hermaphrodites are only women that have their Clitoris greater and hanging out more than others have and so shew like a Mans Yard and it is so called for it is a small exuberation in the upper forward and middle part of the share in the top of the greater slit where the wings end It differs from the Yard in length the common pipe and the want of one pair of the muscles which the Yard hath but is the same in place and substance for it hath two sinewy bodies round without thick and hard but inwardly spongy and full of holes or pores that when the spirits come into it it may stretch and when the spirits are dissipated it grows loose again these sinews as in a Mans Yard are full of gross black vital blood they come from both the share-bones and join with the bones of the Hip they part at first but join about the joining of the share-bones and so they make a solid hard body of the Yard and the end is like the Nut to which is joined a small muscle on each side The head of this counterfeit Yard is called Tertigo and the Wings joining cover it with a fine skin like the foreskin it hath a hole but it goes not through and Vessels run along the back of it as upon a Mans Yard commonly it is but a small sprout lying close hid under the Wings and not easily felt yet sometimes it grows so long that it hangs forth at the slit like a Yard and will swell and stand stiff if it be provoked and some lewd women have endeavoured to use it as men do theirs In the Indies and Egypt they are frequent but I never heard but of one in this Country if there be any they will do what they can for shame to keep it close The Clitoris in Women as it is very small in most serves for the same purpose as the bridle of the Yard doth for the womans stones lying far distant from the Mans Yard the imagination passeth to the spermatical Vessels by the Clitoris moving and the lower ligatures of the Womb which are joyned to the carrying Vessels of the Seed so by the stirring of the Clitoris the imagination causeth the Vessels to cast out that Seed that lyeth deep in the body for in this and the ligaments that are fastened in it lies the chief pleasure of loves delight in Copulation and indeed were not the pleasure transcendently ravishing us a man or woman would hardly ever die for love I told you the Clitoris is so long in some women that it is seen to hang forth at their Privities and not only the Clitoris that lyeth behind the wings but the Wings also for the Wings being two skinny Caruncles on each side one joyn almost at first arising from a welt or gard of the skin of a ligamental substance in the back part the slit of the neck and they ly hid betwixt the two Lips of the Lap they alwayes almost touch one the other and they go up to the end where the share-bone meets and when they joyn they make a fleshy rising and cover the Clitoris with a foreskin and so they rise to the top of the great cleft They are longer from the middle upward and sometimes they will hang forth a little at the great slit without the lips with a blunt corner yet they are threesquare like that part of a Cocks Comb that hangs down under his throat both for form and colour they are soft and spongy partly fleshy and partly skinny In some Countries they grow so long that the Chirurgion cuts them off to avoid trouble and shame chiefly in Egypt they will bleed much when they are cut and the blood is hardly stopt wherefore maids have them cut off betimes and before they marry for it is a flux of humours to them and much motion that makes them grow so long Some Sea-mem say that they have seen Negro Women go stark naked and these wings
life and motion cease the childs must needs cease that depends upon it but it is an error for the child hath a Soul and life of its own and may live a while without the Mother but the Midwife must keep the womb open that it be not stifled till the Chirurgeon cuts it out you shall feel the Child leap when the Mother is dead Charles Stephen shews how to cut out a dead Child And Francis Ruset saith a live Child may be cut out of the womb both child Mother do well it is possible and sometimes necessary to be done and it stands by reason for women receive sometimes wounds in the Peritoneum and the Muscles of the lower belly more dangerous than the Cesarian cut and yet escape well enough A Child may be sometimes very weak yet not dead take heed you do not force delivery in such occasions till you be sure it is time for children may be sick and faint in their Mothers bellies But to prevent danger burn half a pint of white-wine adding no Spice to it but half an ounce of Cinnamon and drink it off if your Travel and throws come upon you be sure it is dead but if it be but sick and weak it will refresh it and strengthen it If the Child be dead in the womb the juyce of Garden Tansey annointed on the secrets or an oyl made in Summer with the herbs before it run to flower and boil'd in oyl till the juyce be wasted and set in the Sun a moneth before you boil it is an especial oyl for Midwives The Eagle-stone held near the privy parts will draw forth the Child as the Loadstone draws Iron but be sure so soon as the Child and after burthen are come away that you hold the stone no longer for fear of danger Any of these herbs half a dram in powder drunk in white-wine will do much viz of Bettony or Sage or Penny-Royal Fetherfew or Centory Ivy-berries and leaves or drink a strong decoction of Master-wort or of Hysop in hot water it soon will bring the dead Child forth because the afterbirth is corrupted in such cases and comes forth by pieces it is fit to drink of the same drink till all be come away or the roots of Polipody stamped and warm'd laid to the soles of her feet presently works the effect The same things almost all are proper when the Child is living and comes to be born but if her Travel be long the Midwife must refresh her with some Chickens broth of the Yolk of a potched Egg with a little bread or some wine or strong water but moderately taken and withal to cheer her up with good words stroaking down her belly above her Navel gently with her hand for that makes the Child move downwards She must bid her hold in her breath as much as she can for that will cause more force to bring out the Child Place here the Picture of all sorts of postures of Children Take notice that all women do not keep the same posture in their delivery some lye in their beds being very weak some sit in a stool or chair or rest upon the side of the bed held by other women that come to the Labor If the Woman that lyeth in be very fat fleshly or gross let her ly groveling on the place for that opens the womb and thrusts it downwards The Midwife must annoint her hands with Oyl of Lillies and the Womans Secrets or with Oyl of Almonds and so with her hands handle and unloose the parts and observe how the Child lyeth and stirreth and so help as time and occasion direct But above all take heed you force not the birth till the time be come and the Child come forward and appears ready to come forth Now the danger were much to force delivery because when the woman hath laboured sore if she rest not a while she will not be able presently to endure it her strength being spent before Also when you see the after-buthen then be sure the Birth is at hand but if the coats be so strong that they will not break to make way for the Child to come forth the Midwife must gently and prudently break and rend it with her nails if she can raise it she may cut a piece of it with a knife or pair of Sciffers but beware of the infant Then follows presently a flux of humours and the Child after that but if all the humours that should make the place slippery chance to run forth by this means before the child come the parts within and without must be annointed with Oyl of Almonds or Lillies and a whole Egg Yelk and white beaten and poured into the privy passage to to make it glib instead of the waters that are run forth too soon If the child have a great head and stick by the way the Midwife must annoint the place with Oyl as before and enlarge the part as much as may be the like must be done when Twins offer themselves if the head comes first the birth is natural but if it come any other way the Midwife must do what she can to bring it to this posture Sometimes the infant comes with the legs forwards and both arms downwards close to the sides this way the Midwife may endeavour to take it forth if it continue the same posture by annointing and gently handling the place but it is safer if she can to turn the Legs upward again by the Belly that the head may first come down by the back of the womb for that is the natural way If the child come forth with both legs and feet first and the Childs hands both lifted above the head this is the worst for danger of all the rest she must strive to turn the Child and if she cannot she must try to bring the hands down to the sides and to keep the legs close that it may come forth or else to bind the feet as they come out with some linnen Cloath and tenderly to help delivery but it will be hard to it Sometimes the Child will come forth with one foot and the other lifted upward Then let the woman in Child-bed be laid upright on her back hold up her thighs and belly that her head be lower than her body then let the Midwife with her hand gently put back the leg that is come forth into the womb again and bid the labouring woman to stir and move her self that by her stirring the birth may offer it self the head downward and if so you may then set her in a Chair as she was at first that she may have a natural delivery but if this cannot be done then the Midwife with her hand must discreetly bring forth that leg that is not yet come forth but beware she put not the Childs hands that lye close down by its sides out of their place if the side of the child come towards the passage she must turn the child
sex that is the weaker and most subject to infirmities in some respects above the other The Female sex then that it may be more nearly provided for wheresoever it is deficient must be considered under three several considerations that is as maids as wives as widows and their several distempers that befall them almost commonly respect either the womb or their breasts or both and many of these diseases and distempers are common to all the Female sex I mean they sometimes happen to them in any of the foresaid three estates of life but Virgins or Maids diseases that are more peculiar to them though not essential because many of them are incident to the rest the causes may be the same they are that wich is called the white Feaver or green Sickness fits of the Mother strangling of the Womb Rage of the Matrix extreme Melancholly Falling-sickness Head-ach beating of the arteries in the back and sides great palpitations of the heart Hypochondriacal diseases from the Spleen stoppings of the Liver and ill affections of the stomach by consent from the womb But that I may make as perfect an enumeration as may be of all diseases incident to our sex give you some of the best remedies that are prescribed by the most Authentick authors or what I my self have proved by long experience Know then that there are some diseases that happen about the secrets of women as when the mouth of the Matrix is too narrow or too great when there is a Yard in the womb like a mans Yard when the secrets are full of Pimples or very rugged when there are swellings or small excrescenses in the Womb or else Warts in the neck of it or the Piles or Chaps Ulcers or Fistulaes or Cancers or Gangreens and Sphacelus or Mortification all these and more that may be reduced to these heads are found in the entrance or mouth of the womb 2. As to the womb it self it is frequently offended with ill distempers being either too hot or too cold too dry or too moist and of these are many more compounded as too hot and too dry too moist and too cold these are all to be cured by their contraries cold by heat moist by driers Or the womb is sometimes ill shaped and strange things are found in it some women have two wombs and some again have none at all Again the vessels of the womb sometimes will open preternaturally and blood run forth in abundance sometimes the womb swells and grows bigger than it should be It may be troubled with a Dropsie with swelling of its veins from too much blood also it may be inflamed displaced broken and it may fall out of the body It may be rotten or else cancerated and sometimes womens stones and vessels for generation are diseased Further the womb may be troubled with an itch it may be weak or painful or suffer by sympathy and antipathy from sweet or stinking smells Moreover the terms sometimes flow too soon sometimes too late they are too many or too few or are quite stopt that they flow not at all Sometimes they fall by drops and again sometimes they overflow sometimes they cause pain sometimes they are of an evil colour and not according to nature sometimes they are voided not by the womb but some other way sometimes strange things are sent forth by the womb and sometimes they are troubled with flux of seed or the whites As for women with child they are subject to miscarry to hard labour to disorderly births of their children sometimes the child is dead in the womb sometimes alive but must be taken forth by cutting or the woman cannot be delivered sometimes she is troubled with false conceptions with ill formations of the child with superfetations another child begot before she is delivered of her first with monsters or Moles and many more such like infirmities And as for women in child-bed sometimes the Secundine or after-birth will not follow their purgations are too few or too many they are in great pains in their belly their privities are rended by hard delivery as far as their Fundament also they are inflamed many times and ulcerated and cannot go to stool but their fundament will fall forth They have swoonding and epileptick fits watching and dotings their whole body swels especially their belly legs and feet they are subject to hot sharp Feavers and acute diseases to vomiting and costiveness to fluxes to incontinence of Urine that they cannot hold their water As for their breasts that hold the greatest consent with the womb of all the parts of the body they are sometimes exceeding great or swelled with milk or increased in number more breasts than there should be by nature sometimes the breasts are inflamed and trouble with an Erisipelas or hard swellings or Scirrhus or full of kernels or tumors called the Kings evil or strange things may be bred in the breasts besides this some breasts are diseased with Ulcers and Fustulaes or Cankers and some have no nipples or are chopt or Ulcerated and sometimes women have breasts will breed no milk to suckle the child with To speak then particularly to all these diseases that belong to our sex might be thought to be over tedious however I shall so handle the matter that I may not troubled the Reader with impertinences that I shall apply my self to what is most needful for the knowledge and cure of them all but because many diseases may be refered to the chief in that kind and the remedies that will cure one may be sufficient to cure the rest the judicious Reader may according as he shall have occasion make a more special application For it is in vain for any one to make use of what is written if they have no Judgement in the things they use in such cases it will be best for them to ask counsel of others first till they may attain to some farther insight themselves and then no doubt but when they shall meet with sufficient remedies to cure the greatest distempers they will be able to make use of the same without farther direction in the cure of those diseases that are lesse not that I intend to omit any thing that is material in the whole but that I may not trouble the Reader with needless repetitions of the same things as too many authours doe which breeds tediousness and can give little or no satisfaction at all CHAP. VI. Of the Green-sickness some call it Leucophlegmatia or Cachexia an ill habit or white Feaver THough both wives and widows are sometimes troubled with this disease yet it is more common to maids of ripe years when they are in love and desirous to keep company with a man It comes from obstruction of the vessels of the womb when the humours corrupt the whole mass of blood and over cool it running back into the great veins For so soon as Maids are ripe their courses begin to flow Nature sending the menstrual blood
burns and hot swellings and head-ach that comes of heat by a likeness and affinity it hath to draw hot vapours to it so Linseed oil is good against burnings Scaliger affirms that Camphire increaseth Venery it may do so if it be used seldome but often used it is certain that it will destroy it There is moreover from ill tempered seed and melancholly blood in the vessels near the Heart which contaminates the Vital and Animal Spirits a melancholy distemper that especially Maids and Widows are often troubled with and they grow exceeding pensive and sad for melancholy black blood abounding in the Vessels of the Matrix runs sometimes back by the great arteries to the heart and infects all the spirits when this blood lieth still they are well but if it be stirred or urged then presently they fall into this distemper they know not why and the arteries of the spleen and back beat strongly and melancholly vapours fly up They are sorely troubled and weary of all things they can take no rest their pain lieth most on their left side and sometimes on the left breast in time they will grow mad and their former great silence turns to prating exceedingly crying out that they see fearful spirits and dead men when it is gone so far it is hard to cure it is vain then to try to make them merry they despair and wish to die and when they find an opportunity they will kill or drown or hang themselves At first when the blood is hot and fiery open a vein in the arm if they have their courses if not in the foot or ancle to bring the courses down Cooling moistening cordials and such things as revive the spirits and conquer melancholy wil do much driers are naught for melancholly is dry Confectio Alkermes is commended for those that can away with it but Confectio de Hyacintho is better use a moistening diet To breed mirth give her waters of Balm and Borage of each three ounces sirrup of the juices of Borage and Bugloss of each one ounce and a half take this at twice and use it often To purge melancholly take six drams of Senna Agarick one dram and a half Borage and violet flowers of each a small handful two drams of Citron peels infuse all six hours in good Rhenish wine strain them and put to them sirrup of Violets one ounce CHAP. II. Of the Falling Sickness WHen Women by reason of the ill affections of the womb fall into Epilepsies and Falling sickness it is worse than any other cause as the symptomes prove for the poisonous vapor is not only in the Nerves as when it is from the brain but also in the membranes veins and arteries The same foul vapour that causeth strangling of the womb produceth this for it causeth divers diseases according to the parts it takes hold on but when it lights forcibly on the Nerves then it causeth the Falling-sickness Sometimes there is a convulsion of the whole body and sometimes but of some parts as of the head or tongue hands or legs eyes or ears some cannot hear others cannot see all lose the sense of feeling some cry out but know not wherefore They that fall if the vapour be not too strong when they rise they go to their work again as if they had no harm but here is not only convulsions as in those that have the Falling-sickness from other parts but stopping the breath as in the strangling of the womb but these seldome some at the mouth as those do for the brain is entire or not much offended nor is their hearing taken away quite by the vapour fastening upon the roots of the Nerves of the ears Rue and Castor that cure fits of the Mother are good here the cure is almost the same only you must add some things that respect the nerves and the Brain Use these Pills twice in a week before supper one hour and take a scruple or half a dram Take Senna and Peony root of each half an ounce Mugwort Rue Betony Yarrow half a handful of each boil them then clarifie the decoction put to it Aloes one ounce and a half of juice of the herb Mercury one ounce let it stand and settle pour off the clear liquor then add two drams of Rhubarb sprinkled with water of Cinnamon Agarick half an ounce Mastick and Epileptick powder of each half a dram make the pills with sirrup of Mugwort To mend the distemper of the head and Womb take conserve of Rosemary flowers and of the Tile tree of Balm and Lillies of the valley of the root Scorzonera Candied of each one ounce Diamoschu dulce one dram with two drams of the roots of Peony and seeds of Agnus Castus and sirrup of Stoechas make an Electuary to take at your pleasure Nor are these all the ill consequences of the wombs distempers but sometimes violent head-ach springs from it which is the greatest pain of all the rest and sometimes it is all over the head or but upon one side or in the eyes the ill vapours rising by the veins and arteries of the Womb to the membranes and films of the brain when the vessels are full of a thin sharp blood that is carried from the womb to the membranes it stretcheth and rends them and corrodes and bites so that the pain is intollerable the cure is to purge away the peccant humour that lieth in the Womb for this is not as other head-ach is that comes from other causes the pain runs also to the Loins and the Membranes there by some capillary veins from the womb The pain of the head by affection with the womb is in all the head commonly but is chiefly i● the hinder part of the head because the womb being Nervous consents with the membranes of the brain by the membrane of the Marrow of the back hence it is that women are more subject to the head-ach than men are because of the womb that holds such affinity with the Nerves of the head The violent beating of the heart and Arteries both in the Sides and Back is by consent from the womb when evil humors therein contained pass by the Arteries and Poysonous vapours arise to those parts Cordials are good as Cinnamon Water and Aqua Monefardi or Mathiolas his water the Disease seems small but it is not safe because the cause of it is very ill In this Disease the Artery that beats in the Back beats strongly because it is part of the great Artery but the Arteries that beat in the Hypochondrion beat not so strongly for they are smaller branches from the Spleen and Mesentery but the cause is the same The Arteries are inflamed by the ill vapours and humours sent from the womb and the heart is exceedingly heated by them but this hot humor sometimes beats by reason of the great Artery quite over the whole body but it lasts not long for there is little corruption of the humors Some say the blood
thick and gross milk and sometimes a hot and dry distemper of the breasts will burn up the thin part of the milk purge away thick humours from the blood eat meats of good digestion as Veal Chickens Kids flesh and use a moistening and attenuating Diet Fryed Onions and all sowr spiced meats will communicate their qualities to the milk that you may find both by smell and tast Strong passions of anger or fear will cause chollerick and melancholly milk which makes the child lean that it cannnot thrive Hence come gripings and wringing pains in the belly Thrush in the mouth and Falling-sickness good wine moderately drank sometimes will help the ill smell and taste of the milk Let the Nurse be sure to observe a Diet that is most proper for her milk and may not corrupt it and also to avoid all passions and venereous actions during the time she is a nurse and if for all this the milk prove ill she must purge away evil qualities according to my former prescriptions CAAP. VI. Of the Child CHildren that look white and pale when they are born are weak and sickly and seldome live long but if it be of a reddish colour all over the body when it is first born and this colour change by degrees to a Rose colour there is no doubt of the child but it may do well if it cry strongly and clear it argues a great strength of the breast Take notice of all the parts of it and see all be right and the Midwife must handle it very tenderly and wash the body with warm wine then when it is dry roul it up with soft cloths and lay it into the Cradle but in the swadling of it be sure that all parts be bound up in their due place and order gently without any crookedness or rugged foldings for infants are tender twigs and as you use them so they will grow straight or crooked wipe the childs eyes often to make them clean with a piece of soft linnen or silk and lay the arms right down by the sides that they may grow right and sometimes with your hand stroke down the belly of the child toward the neck of the bladder to provoke it to make water But the first work to be done so soon as it is born is to cut the Navel-string and to bind that up right I shewed you how to do it before when the Navel-string is cut off strew upon it a powder of Bole Sarcocolla Dragons blood Cummin and Myrrh of each the same quantity and bind a piece of Cotton or Wool over it to keep it from falling off again and if the child be weak after this anoint the childs body over with oil of Acorns for that will comfort and strengthen it and keep away the cold wash the child next with warm water pare your nails and pick out the filth from the childs nostrils open the Fundament that it may encline to go to stool and keep it neither too hot nor too cold nor in a place that is too light let not the beams of the Sun or Moon dart upon it as it lieth in the Cradle especially but let the cradle stand in a darkish and shadowy place and let the head lie a little higher than the body for a child that is very young to look upon the light of a candle will make them pore blind or squint-eyed so will the light of the Sun set not a candle behind the head of it for the child will turn its eyes to the light Take heed the child be not frighted for it will soon be fearful if you let it sleep alone so soon as it awakes and misseth the Nurse keep it not waking longer than it will but use means to provoke it to sleep by rocking it in the cradle and singing Lullabies to it carry it often in the arms and dance it to keep it from the Rickets and other diseases let it not suck too much at once but often suckle it as it can digest it After four months let loose the arms but still roul the breast and belly and feet to keep out cold air for a year till the child have gained more strength Shift the childs clouts often for the Piss and Dung if they lie long in it will fetch on the skin and put the child to great pain you may suffer the child to cry a little for it is better for the brain and lungs that are thus opened and discharged of superfluous humours and natural heat is raised by it it doth most good before they suck and when the former suck is digested but too much crying will cause rheums to fall and oftentimes the child will be broken bellied by its overstraining change the breasts as you give suck sometimes let it draw one sometimes another and for the first month let it suck as much as it can so the stomach be not too full Give it some pap of barley bread steeped a while in water and then boiled in milk children that are lusty may be fed with this betimes but they must not suck till it be a full hour after it and thus they should be dieted till they breed teeth So soon as the teeth come forth let it eat more substantial meat that is easily chewed and of quick digestion also give it Cows milk and broths let not the child rest too soon upon its legs for if the legs be weak they will grow crooked by reason of the weight of their bodies When the child is seven months old you may if you please wash the body of it twice a week with warm water till it be weaned Let the teeth come forth most part especially the eye-teeth before the child be weaned for those teeth cause great pains when they are breeding and Feavers and grievous a king of their Gums proceed from them the stronger the child is the sooner he is ready to be weaned some at twelve months old and some not till fifteen or eighteen months old you may stay two years if you please but use the child to other Food by degrees till it be acquainted with it Let the child drink but little wine that it do not over-heat the blood the best time to wean the child is either the Spring or the Fall of the Leaf the Moon increasing For seven years give the child nourishing meats and an indifferent plentiful diet to make it grow cocker them not over much nor provoke them to passions I cannot tell which may do most hurt Too much play as children are prone to will over-heat the blood and want of play and idleness will make them dull Some Parents are too fond of their children and leave them to their own wills some are too froward and dishearten their children the mean is best for them both and so they shall be sure to find it I have as briefly as I could touched upon all occasions for women and their children and some things may seem to be needless
like driers use Sulphur and Allum Baths with oaken leaves And give it this powder take burnt Hogs-bladders Stones of a Hare roasted and Cocks throats roasted of each half a dram and two scruples of Acorns Mace and Nip of each a scruple give half a dram with Oaken leave Water XXXVI Childrens Urine is sometimes stopt either by gross matter or the stone you may try with the Catheter you must purge the humours with honey of Roses Cassia Turpentine with a decoction of red Pease also Grass-water and Restharrow and Dropwort water are good take Hares blood one ounce Saxifrage roots six drams calcine them the Dose is a scruple or half a dram with White-Wine and Saxifrage Water The Stone in the bladder is as common with children as the Stone of the Kidneys with men and women crude gross meats and unclean milk breed it there is also a weakness in the Liver and stomach when they do not well part gross blood from the pure but much earthy juice remains in the child sometimes it is natural from the Parents they piss by drops and what comes forth is like clear water or whey or milk and sometimes blood comes forth it grows daily and at last they must be cut if they be not cured in time Let then the belly be alwaies kept loose and the nurse eat no slimy gross meats anoint the bladder-with oil of Lillies and of Scorpions and lay on a Cataplasme of Pellitory of the Wall boild in oil of Lillies or give two drops of Spirit of Vitriol with half a drain of Cypress Turpentine Take Magistery or Crabs eyes white Amber prepared Goats blood of each a scruple give it frequently with water of Parsley XXXVII There is one disease more I shall end with and that is called Siriasis an inflammation of the membranes of the brain it is from phlegmatick blood putrified and grows hot and cholerick hot weather windy milk and nurses ill diet may cause it The forehead grows hot hollow the face is red they are dry Feaverish want an appetite The fore part of the head is hollow where the sagittal and Coronal Sutures meet for there the bones are membranons and harden in time it is dangerous and some say deadly When this bone or membrane falls there is a pit and the brain falls down they commonly die in three daies Give a glister of sirrup of Roses or Violets lay on coolers of the juice of Lettice Gourd Melons or split a Pompion in two pieces and lay it on but cool not the brain too much anoint it with oil of Roses let the Nurses diet be cooling or change her for a better Take oil of Roses half an ounce Populeon one ounce the white of an egg and an emulsion of the cold seeds drawn with Rose water two drams after the inflammation is abated and the flux stopt lay on oil of Cammomile one ounce and a half of Dill hal half an ounce with the yolk of an egg Thus by the blessing of Almighty God I have with great pains and endeavour run through all the parts of the Midwives Duty and what is required both for the Mother the Nurse and the Infant desiring that it may be as useful for the end I have written it to profit others as I have found it beneficial to Me in my long Practice of Midwifery To God alone be all Praise and Glory Amen FINIS Books Printed for or Sold by Simon Miller at the Star at the West-end of S. Pauls Quarto PHysical Experiments being a plain description of the causes signs and cures of most diseases incident to the body of man with a discourse of Witch-craft by William Drage Practitioner of Physick at Hitchin in Hartfordhire Bishop White upon the Sabbath The Artificial Changeling The Life of Tamerlane the Great The Pragmatical Jesuit a play by Richard Carpenter The Life and Death of the Valiant and Renowned Sir Francis Drake His Voyages and Discoveries in the West-Indies and aboue the World with his Noble and Heroick Acts. By Samuel Clark late Minister of Bennet Finck London Large Octavo Master Shepherd on the Sabbath The Rights of the Crown of England as it is Established by Law by E. Bagshaw of the Inner Temple An Enchiridion of Fortification or a handful of knowledge in Martial affairs demonstrating both by Rule and Figure as well Mathematically by exact Calculations as Practically to fortifie any body either Regular or Irregular How to run approaches to pierce through a Counter-scarf to make a Gallery over a Mote to spring a Myne c. With many other notable matters belonging to War useful and necessary for all Officers to enrich their knowledge and Practice The Life and Adventures of Buscon the witty Spaniard Epicurus's Morals Small Octavo Daphnis and Chloe a Romance Merry Drollery complete or a Collection of Jovial Poems Merry Songs Witty Drolleries intermixed with Pleasant Catches Collected By W.N. C.B. R.S. J.G. Lovers of Wit The Midwives Book or the whole art of Midwifry discoverd directing child-bearing women how to behave themselves in their Conception Bearing Breeding and Nursing of Children in six Books Butler of War Tractatus de Venenis or a Treatise of poisons Their sundry sorts names natures and virtues with their symptoms signs diagnostick and prognostick and antidotes Wherein are divers necessary questions discussed The truth by the most Learned confirmed by many instances examples and stories Illustrated And both Philosophically and Medicinally handled By William Ramesey The Urinal of Physick By Robert Record Doctor of Physick Whereunto is added an ingenious treatise concerning Physicians Apothecaries and Chirurgeons set forth by a Doctor in Queen Elizabeths daies with a Translation of Papius Ahalsossa concerning Apothecaries Confecting their Medicines worthy perusing and following Large Twelves The Moral Practice of the Jesuites Demonstrated by many Remarkable Histories of their Actions in all parts of the World Collected either from Books of the Greatest Authority or most certain and unquestionable Records and Memorials by the Doctors of the Sorbonne Artimedorus of Dreams Oxford Jeasts Refined now in the Press The third part of the Bible and New Testament A Complete Practice of Physick Wherein is plainly pescribed the Nature Causes differences and signs of all diseases in the body of man With the choicest cures for the same By John Smith Doctor in Physick The Duty of every one that will be saved being Rules Precepts Promises and Examples directing all persons of what degree soever how to govern their passions and to live vertuously and soberly in the world The Spiritual Chymist or six Decads of Divine Meditations on several Subjects with a short account of the Authors Life By William Spurstow D. D. Sometime Minister of the Gospel at Hackney near London Small Twelves The Understanding Christans Duty A Help to prayer A new method of preserving and restoring health by the vertue of Coral and Steel Davids sling
for the water pipe but they are joined about the middle of the share-bone and there they lose near a third part of their sinewy substance The use of these two sinewy bodies that make the yard is for the vital spirits to run through the thin parts of them and fill the Yard with spirits and they are so thick and compact and strong on the outside that they hinder these spirits from breaking suddenly away for should they flee out the Yard will stand no longer but presently fall down In the inside of the substance of the Yard which is wrapt about by the outward sinewy substance there is seen a thin and tender artery coming from the root of the Yard and runs quite through the whole loose substance of it Besides these there is a Conduit pipe placed at the lower part of the Yard that serves both for Seed and Urine to be put forth by as common to them both and it runs through the middle of the foresaid two sinewy bodies and is of the same substance with them and is loose and thick soft and tender and runs equally in all respects from the neck of the bladder to the top of the Yard only it is something larger where it begins than where it ends at the top of the Nut. This pipe at first as I said hath three holes where it riseth from the neck of the bladder that in the middle is wider than the other two pipes or holes are which stand on both sides of it and which are derived from the passage that comes from the Seed Vessels and they carry the Seed into this great pipe In this great pipe where it is fastened to the Nut of the Yard and with the two sinewy bodies there is a little hollow place wherein when a man is troubled with the running of the Reins by reason of the Pox some corrupt Seed or sharp matter lyeth which occasions great pains and Ulcers and sometimes the Chirurgeon is forced to cut off the top of the Yard and sometimes from these Ulcers there will grow a piece of flesh in the Yards passage for Urine which hinders the Urine that it cannot come forth till that piece of flesh be taken away by conveighing something into that Urinary passage that may eat it off There is one thing more worth taking notice of by Chirurgions concerning this pipe or Urinary passage that from the place where it begins and goes forward from the neck of the bladder to the spermatick Vessels and forestanders that there is a thin and very tender skin which is of a most acute feeling and to stir up delight in the act of Venery and it will make the Yard stand upon any delightsome thoughts or desires If the Chirurgions be not careful when they thrust the springs in near that place they will soon break this skin and undoe their Patient This common pipe comes from the neck of the bladder that is it begins there but it doth not take its being from it for boyl the bladder of any creature and it will part from it whereby it is plain that it is only join'd to it and so runs on to the Nut of the Yard CHAP. VIII The Nut of the Yard THe Nut is a piece of soft thin brawny flesh that it may do no hurt to the Womb when it enters it is full of spirits and blood very quick and tender of feeling yet will endure to be touched the skin of it is very pure thin skin and if it be broken or rub'd off it will soon grow again but if the body of it be hurt in the fleshy part or once lost it will never grow again it is a little sharp at the end and made like to a top that it may enter the better it is fastened as I told you to the foreskin or the lower part with a ligament or bridle which is sometimes so streight tied and is so strong that it will pull the head of the Yard backwards when it stands but it is usually broken or gives way the first time that a man lyeth with a woman for the combate is then doubtless so furious that a man feels no pain of it by reason of the abundance of pleasure that takes it off otherwise doubtless the part is so quick of feeling that no man were able to endure it CHAP. IX The Muscles of the Yard A Muscle is an Instrument for voluntary motion for without that no part were in a capacity to move it self There is a little Book lately set forth and is well worth the reading concerning the reason of the motion of the Muscles Of these Muscles the Yard hath four two on each side to give motion to it These Muscles are a fibrous flesh to make up their body they have sinews for feeling veins for nourishment Arteries for vital blood a skin to cover them and to part one Muscle from another and all of them from the flesh you may if you please easily discern them in a leg of a Rabbit Of each side of the Yard one of these Muscles is shorter and thicker than the others are and they serve to raise the Yard and to make it stand and are therefore called raisers or erecters the other two are longer and smaller and they open the lower part of the Urinary pipe both when men make water and when they cast forth the Seed and are therefore called hasteners because they dispatch and hasten the work one pair of these Muscles comes from a part of the hip near the beginning of the Yard besides that they raise the Yard to make it stand they also bend the fore part of the Yard to be thrust into the womb so that all things are so exactly fitted by nature that a blind man cannot miss it The two longer Muscles come from the sphincter of the Fundament and are of a more fleshy substance and are full as long as the Yard under which they go downward ending at the side of the water pipe about the middle of the Yard were it not for these large Muscles to open the conduit pipe the passage would be stopt by repletion of nervy bodies both when men should make water or cast out the Seed They also hold the Yard firm that it lean not to either side and serve farther to press forth the Seed out of the forestanders all helping to the sudden and forceable casting it out in time of Copulation lest the spirits fly away and the Seed prove unfruitful There are all manner of Vessels in the Yard as Veins Nerves Arteries yet Columbus tells us that Vesalius a great Anatomist maintains that there is neither Vein nor Nerve in it which is very false for there are some Veins and Arteries to be seen in the outward skin of the Yard others are within and there the Arteries are far more than the Veins and are dispersed through the whole body of the Yard The right Artery runs to the left side of it and the left
can sooner or later procure nourishment and spirits The parts therefore next the Liver are sooner made than those that are far from it and those are first made that the mothers blood first runs to that is first the Navel Vein and that being first made by that the blood is carried to other parts The Womb is like a Bottle or Bladder blown when the Infant is in it and it lieth in the lower belly and in the last place amongst the entrails by the water course because this is easily enlarged as the child grows in the Womb and the child is by this means more easily begot and the Woman delivered of it nor is it any hindrance to the parts of nutrition while the woman continues with Child but had the Womb where the Infant lieth been seated in the middle or upper belly the child would have been soon stifled for the womb could not have stretched wider according to the growth of the Child because the bones that compass the upper belly would have hindered it The hollow part of the belly where the Womb lieth is called the Bason and it is placed between the Bladder and the right Gut the bladder stands before it and is a strong membrane to defend it and the right Gut lieth behind it as a pillow to keep off the hardness of the backbone so that the womb lieth in the middle of the lowest belly to ballance the body equally and to contain the Womb the Bason is larger in women than in men as you may see by their larger buttocks As the child grows the bottom of the womb which lieth uppermost lying at liberty and not tyed grows upward towards the Navel and so leans upon the small Guts and so fills all the hollow of the flancks when women are near the time to bring forth The Womb is fastened and tied partly by the substance of it and also by four ligaments two above and two beneath but the bottom is not tied neither before nor behind nor above but is free and at liberty that it can stretch as need requires in Copulation or Child-bearing and it hath a kind of animal motion to satisfie its desire Galen saith that the sides are fastened to the hanch-bone by membranes ligaments coming from the muscles of the Loyns and interwoven oft-times with fleshy fibres and carried to other parts of the womb to hold it fast The neck of the womb is tied but not every side to the parts that lie near it at the sides it is loosely tied to the Peritoneum by certain membranes that grow to it and on the back part it is fastened with thin fibres and a little fat to the right Gut and the holy-bone it lieth upon that fat all along that passage and it grows into one with the Fundament above the Lap to which it is joined before if the Fundament chance to be ulcerated within the dung hath been seen to fall out at the Lap. The fore part is knit to the neck of the bladder and because the wombs neck is broader than the neck of the bladder some part of it is fastened by membranes coming from the Peritoneum to the share-bone from hence it happens that when the womb is inflamed the Woman hath a great desire to go to stool and to make water but cannot The lower strings that fasten the Womb are two also called the horns of the womb they are sinewy round reddish and hollow chiefly at their ends like to the husky membrane and sometimes this hollowness is full of fat these horns come from the sides of the Womb and at their first coming forth they touch the Seed-carrying Vessels When these productions are stretched too much as they are ofttimes in hard labour in Child-birth there happens to women a rupture as well as to men but they may be cured by cutting and strong ligatures Fleshy fibres are joined to these productions after they come forth of the Abdomen and they are small Muscles called holders up in Women they belong not to the Stones as they do in men because they join in men to the Seed Vessels When these ligaments come at the share-bone they change into a broad sinewy slenderness mingled with a membrane which toucheth and covers the forepart of the share-bone and upon this the Clitoris cleaveth and is tied which being nervous and of pure feeling when it is rubbed and stirred it causeth lustful thoughts which being communicated to these ligaments is passeth to the Vessels that carry the seed Yet these holders up serve for other uses for as they are Muscles that hold up the Stones in men so they hold up the womb in women that it may be kept fom falling out at the Lap. The parts then of the womb are two The neck or mouth and the bottom The neck is the entrance into it which will open and shut like a purse for in the act of Copulation it receives the Yard into it but after conception the point of a Bodkin cannot pass yet when the time comes for the Child to come forth it will open and make room enough for the greatest child that is conceived This made Galen wonder and so should we all to consider how fearfully and wonderfully God hath made us as the Psalmist saith The Works of the Lord are wonderful to be sought out of all those that take Pleasure therein The form of the womb is exactly round and in maids it is no bigger than a walnut yet it will stretch so after conception that it will easily contain the child and all that belongs to it it is small at first to embrace the Seed that is but little cast into it It is made of two skins an outward and an inward skin the outward is thick smooth and slippery excepting those parts where the Seed Vessels come into the womb the inward skin is full of small holes It is far different from the Matrix of beasts which Galen knew not for the Grecians in those daies held it an abomination to dissect any man or woman though they were dead all the knowledge of Anatomy they learned was by dissecting Apes and such Creatures that were the most like to mankind but the inside of men or women they saw not and so were ignorant of the difference between them Whence it is confirmed that they knew not the seat of some diseases so well as we do and therefore must need fall short of the cure nor would they use the means to find out what disease they died of which true Anatomy would have made known to them and would have been a great furtherance to preserve others that were sick of the same diseases that others died of before It hath been much and long disputed how many Cells are in the womb Mundinus and Galen say there are seven several Cells and that a woman may by reason of so many places distinct one from the other have seven Children at a birth and many midwives are of
shivering or trembling to run through every part of her body and that is by reason of the heat that draws inward to keep the conception and so leaves the outward parts cold chill Secondly The pleasure she takes at that time is extraordinary and the mans seed comes not forth again for the womb closely embraceth it and will shut as fast as possibly may be Thirdly The womb sinks down to cherish the seed and so the belly grows flatter than it was before Fourthly She finds pain that goes about her belly chiefly about her Navel and lower belly which some call the Water-course Fifthly Her stomach becomes very weak she hath no desire to eat her meat but is troubled with sowr belchings Sixthly Her monthly terms stop at some unseasonable time that she lookt not for Seventhly She hath a preternatural desire to something not fit to eat nor drink as some women with child have longed to bite off a piece of their Husbands Buttocks Eightly Her Brests swell and grow round and hard and painful Ninthly She hath no great desire to copulation for some time she will be merry or sad suddenly upon no manifest cause Tenthly She so much loatheth her victuals that let her but exercise her body a little in motion and she will cast off what lieth upon her stomack Eleventhly Her Nipples will look more red at the ends than they usually do Twelfthly the veins of her breasts will swell and shew themselves very plain to be seen Thirteenthly Likewise the veins about the eyes will be more apparent Fourteenthly The womb pressing the right gut it is painful for her to go to stool she is weaker than she was her visage discoloured These are the common rules that are laid down But if a womans courses be stopt and the Veins under her lowest Eylid swell and the colour be changed and she hath not broken her rest by watching the night before these signs seldom or never fail of Conception for the first two months If you keep her water three dayes close stopt in a glass and then strain it through a fine linnen cloth you will find live worms in the cloth Also a needle laid twenty four hours in her Urine will be full of red spots if she have conceived or otherwise it will be black or dark coloured To know whether the Infant conceived be male or female I refer you to Hippocrates Aphor 48. for it is a very hard thing to discover 1. If it be a boy she is better coloured her right Breast will swell more for males lye most on the right side and her belly especially on that side lieth rounder and more tumified and the Child will be first felt to move on that side the woman is more cheerful and in better health her pains are not so often nor so great the right breast is harder and more plump the nipple a more clear red and the whole visage clear not swarthy 2. If the marks before mentioned be more apparent on the left side it is a Girle that she goes with all 3. If when she riseth from the place she sits on she move her right foot first and is more ready to lean on her right hand when she reposeth all signifies a boy Lastly Drop some drops of breast Milk into a Bason of water if it swim on the top it is a Boy if it sink in round drops judge the contrary CHAP. IV. Of false Conception and of the Mole or Moon Calf MAny women themselves have thought that they had conceived with Child because their bellies were swoln so great and their courses were staid and came not down according to natures custome whereas this swelling of the belly more and more and stopping of the Termes proceeded from nothing else but an ill shaped lump of flesh which grows greater every day in the womb and is fed by the Terms that flow to it and this is that Midwives call a Mole or Moon-Calf and these are of two sorts one the true the other the false Mole The true Mole is a mishapen piece of flesh without figure or order it is full of Veins and Vessels with discoloured veins or membranes of almost all colours without any entrails or bones or motion it is bred in the wombs hollowness and cleaves fast to the sides of it but takes no substance from it sometimes it hath a skin to cover it and is empty within sometimes it is long or round and some women have cast forth three at a time like the Yard of a man sometimes these Moles are without sense sometimes they have an obscure feeling sometimes they are bred with the Child and then is the Child in great danger to be opprest by them sometimes they are voided when the Child is delivered or before or after Widows have been known to have had these Moles formed in their wombs by their own seed and blood that flows thither But ordinarily I think this comes not to pass but it proceeds from a fault in the forming faculty when the mans seed in Copulation is weak or defective and too little so that it is overcome by the much quantity of the womans blood the faculty begins to work but cannot perfect and so onely Veins and Membranes are made but the Child is not made yet this Mole is of so different kinds that it is not possible to set them down according to their several varieties but doubtless a Mole is sooner formed if Men and Women ly together when they have their courses and the blood is not fit for formation by reason of impurity so that neither heat nor cold are the chief cause of this error but the uncleanness of the matter that is not endued with a forming faculty from corrupt seed or menstruous blood bad humours are ingendred and nature works in vain Some are called false Moles and of those are four sorts as their causes are for either they proceed from wind and are called windy swellings or from water flowing to the womb and called watry swellings or else diverse humours cause this swelling and sometimes it is nothing but a bag full of blood If the Child be conceived with a Mole it draws the nourishment from the Child Both sexes doubtless contribute to the making of most Moles the seed of the Man being choakt with the blood of the woman and wrapt both in a caule Nature will make something of it though nothing to the purpose If it be true that some widdows have had them they were neither of the same shape nor substance but voided will consume into water and this can be supposed only of dead Moles for living Moles that have some sense or feeling or true motion in them can never be produced but mans seed must be a part of their beginning as for Maids they cannot breed any true Mole because a true Mole must be made of the greatest part of the womans blood coming into the womb but the vessels passages in
maids are too narrow so that there is no flux of blood thither to make this Mole of as it is in women that have had the use of man but without dispute the principal cause is womens carnally knowing their Husbands when their Terms are purging forth from whence Moles and Monsters distorted imperfect ill qualified Childred are begotten Let such as fear God or love themselves or their posterity beware of it The windy Mole proceeds from an over-cold womb Spleen and Liver which breeds wind that fastneth in the hollow of the part Sometimes the womb is weak and cannot transmute the blood for nourishment but it turns to water which cannot be all sent forth but part of it remains in the womb also the womb ofttimes receives a great confluence of water from the spleen or from some parts nigh unto it The Mole made of many humors flowing to the womb proceeds from the Whites or ill purgations coming from the menstruous Veins The fourth Mole is a skin full of blood with many white diaphanous vessels if you cast it into the water the skin coagulates like a clod of seed and the blood runs away It is very hard to know a false conception from a true until four moneths be past and then the motion of the body of the thing conceived will shew it for if it be a living Child that moves quick and lively but the false conception falls from one side to another like a stone as the woman turns her self in her bed if it stir at all it is but like a sponge trembling and beating and contracts and dilates it self like the beating of the pulse almost This false conception hath many signes whereby it personates and shews like a true Conception for the Terms stop their stomachs fail they loath their meat they vomit and belch sowrly their breasts and belly swell cunning Midwives and women themselves that have them are deceived taking one for the other There are many other things bred in the womb sometimes besides these Moles Two famous Physician of Senon tell us of a woman that had a Child in her womb that did not corrupt nor stink though it lay long dead there untill it was turned into a stone cold and heat and driness might keep the child from corrupting but there was also a petrifying humour mixt with the seed and blood or it could never have been turned into a stone there is but this single History that I ever read of this kind and Authors say the mother lived twenty eight years after she was delivered of it but it is no great wonder why it did not stink nor corrupt in the womb for many aged women live many years with a Mole in the body yet it never stinks nor corrupts though they keep it in them till they dye As for Monsters of all sorts to be formed in the womb all nations can bring some examples Worms Toades Mice Serpents Gordonius saith are common in Lumbardy and so are those they call Soole kints in the Low Countries which are certainly caused by the heat of their stones and menstrual blood to work upon in women that have had company with men and these are sometimes alive with the infant and when the Child is brought forth these stay behind and the woman is sometimes thought to be with Child again as I knew one there my self which was after her child-birth delivered of two like Serpents and both run away into the Burg wall as the women supposed but it was at least three moneths after she was delivered of a Child and they came forth without any loss of blood for there was no after burden Again in time of Copulation Imagination ofttimes also produceth Monstrous births when women look too much on strange objects To distinguish then false conceptions from true but if there be both true and false at once that is very hard to know False Conceptions cause the greatest pains in their Backs and Groins and Loyns and Head their Bellies swell sooner they faint more their Faces and Feet and Legs swell their Bellies grow hard like a Dropsie they have such pain in their Bellies that they cannot sleep because they carry such a dead weight within them and though their Faces and breasts swell they grow daily soft and lank and no milk in their Breasts but what is like water or very little whereas women with Child about the fourth moneth have their Breasts swoln with milk Some women look well with these false Conceptions but most of them look pale and wan and ill favoured If it be a boy that is conceived he will stir at the beginning of the third Moneth and a Girle at the beginning of the third or fourth moneth and so soon as the infant moves there is Milk bred in the Breasts as any one may prove that will The Child that is alive moves to all sides and upward and downward without any help but oftenest to the right flanck A false conception may have a motion from the expulsive faculty but not from it self and being not tied by ligaments as a living Child is it tumbles to one side or other and if she lye on her back and one press it down with his hand gently there it will stay and not remove up again of it self If she go with a Mole nine months compleat her belly will swell more and more but she will wax lean and wan and never offer to be delivered Yet a woman may go ten or eleven months with child before her time be perfect to bring forth but this depends upon the time when the child was begotten and some women ordinarily go longer or shorter before they come to bring forth Those that have Moles are usually barren or their Privities are ulcerated for it hurts the womb and the whole fabrick of their bodies The windy Mole will swell the belly like a Bladder and it will sound like a Drum but it is softer than the fleshy Mole or the watry it grows sooner and sooner disappears and she will feel her self lighter when it abates but sometimes it will heat the belly with such violence as if she were upon the rack The watry Mole is a fluctuation of water from one side to another as the woman turns her self when she lieth and then that lide will be higher where the water falls and the other side will sink down the more and grow flatter The Mole caused from many humours doth not make the belly swell so much as the watry Mole doth because the water comes more in quantity and is clear whereas the humours are reddish and stink when they come forth like water wherein flesh hath been washed There is one observation more concerning false conceptions that when they happen the Flowers stop presently and never come down whereas they do sometimes the first two months in true conceptions because they are superfluous in strong full fed persons before the child comes to want more nutriment also the Navel
for the womb consents or dissents by sympathy and antipathy and sweet things applied to the privities profit in such cases and stinking things to the nose as burnt leather feathers or the like There is a great agreement between the womb and the brain as Hippocrates proves by a smoke to try barrenness by and there is the like between the womb and the Heart by Nerves and Arteries Sweet scents are pleasing to all womens wombs and ill savours offend but not in all women alike for where the Matrix is well disposed and not disaffected by reason of ill humours that it is charged with those Women are much delighted with sweet smels but it is not so with others who are unclean for they cannot away with sweet smels for no sooner do they begin to scent them but they fall into those fits for while the womb resents those sweet swels the ill humours that lye hid in the womb especially where the seed is corrupted fly up with the spirits and carry the bad humours with them to the Heart and to the brain and so cause these stiflings of the womb This is general for all sweet things that the Matrix is pleased with them rightly applied for apply any sweet thing to the Privities the womb is quiet and well refresht by them and so the humours are still or else they move downward but contrarily stinking things by Antipathy with the womb are thrust out by the spirits when we apply such stinks to the nose for the spirits fly downwards and often there is an abortion thereby The womb cannot smell scents no more than it can hear sounds or see objects for scents belong to the nose which is the Organ of smelling as colours to the eyes that are the instruments of seeing the ears of hearing but the womb partakes with these scents by reason of a thin vapour or spirit that comes from any strong smell for the womb is affected as our senses are very suddenly as it feels exactly which is in some kind a general sense and is common to every part of the body our spirits are refresht with sweet vapours not discerning them but as they are placed and strengthened by them But how doth the womb chuse sweet smels and refuse the contrary if she cannot discern I know not why it is so unless the reason be because of the impurity of those vapours that arise from stinking things for all such things are noynoysome and not well concocted and defile the spirts contained in the parts of Generation and so cause faintings and swoundings whereas sweet smels are pleasant and refresh the spirits But why then doth Ambergreece and Musk cause suffocations being so extreamely sweet scented and Assafetida and Castoreum two stinking cure it The Answer is that all women are not so affected but onely they whose wombs as I said are charged with ill humours and then quick spirits arising from sweet smels presently move the brain and the membranes of it and so the membranous womb is soon drawn into consent the bad vapours that lay still before being stirred and raised by the Arteries flee to the heart and the brain and by secret passages cause such fits but noysome smels being raw and ill tempered stop the pores of the brain and come not to the inward membranes to prevent them Also Nature being offended with destructive ill qualified scents raiseth up all her forces as against an open enemy to oppose them and so casts out of the womb with the ill vapours the ill humours also from which these vapours rise so comes a crisis in acute diseases if Nature be strong she casts them forth and when a man takes a purge Nature helps her self against the ill qualities of the Medicament which she can no way conquer but by casting it forth and so what humours were peccant are cast forth with it It was the judgment of Hippocrates that womens wombs are the cause of all their diseases for let the womb be offended all the faculties Animal Vital and natural all the parts the Brain Heart Liver Kidneys Bladder Entrails and bones especially the share-bone partake with it but no part is so much of consent with the womb as the Breasts are The agreement between the womb and the Brain comes from the Nerves and membranes of the marrow of the back some fee great pains in the hinder part of the head some are frantick others so silent they cannot speak Some have dimness of sight dulness of hearing noyse in their ears strange passions and Convulsions It agrees with the Heart by the Arteries of the Seed and lower belly and if these be stopt or choked by a venemous air the hearts natural heat is dissolved faintings and swoondings and intermission of pulse follow with stopping of their breath so that you cannot perceive them to breath unless you apply a clear looking-glass to their mouth and if they breath at all there will be left a dewy vapor upon the Glass if not they are dead for some of these women draw in no more air than what comes in by the pores of the skin into the Arteries and so goes to the Heart and such persons sometimes lye in such fits twenty four hours at least and many of them have lain so long that their Friends have thought them to be dead and have caused them to be unhappily buried when they were alive and would no doubt have revived when the fit had been over I speak this for a warning to others to beware what they do upon such occasions and to give at least two or three dayes time before they put them into the ground some have been taken alive out of their Coffins long after they were thought to be dead The womb and Liver agree by Veins running from the Liver to the womb which is the cause of Jaundies Dropsies and Green-sickness if the blood be naught that comes to it And that the Kidnies by the Seed-veins consents with the womb is manifest by the pains of the loins women suffer when they have their Courses for the left Seed-Vein comes from the left emulgent or kidney-vein on the same side So the womb the bladder and the right gut agree for if the womb be inflamed presently follows a desire to go to stool and to make water by reason of the nearness and communion these parts have one with the other by the membranes of the Peritoneum that tye the womb and these parts together and by common Vessels running betwixt for from the same branch of the vein of the under belly run small Fibres to these three parts but the consent of the womb with the breasts is most observable the humours passing ordinarily from one to the other whereby we may know the affections of the womb and how to cure them and of the state of the Child contained in it Lufitanus tells us that he saw two women that voided monethly blood by their Nipples when their Courses were
not so pure as the first riseth to the breasts to make milk and the grossest part of the three stays in the womb and comes away with the birth and after-birth But this is a long dispute how the child comes to be fed in the womb Alcmeon thought the childs body being soft like a sponge did draw nourishment by all parts of its body as a sponge sucks water not only drinking from the mothers veins but from the womb also Hippocrates as well as Democritus or Epicurus seems to say that the child sucks both nourishment and breath at the mouth from the mother when she breaths for these two causes 1. Because it could not suck so soon as it is born were it not used to it before 2. There are excrements found in the Guts of a new born child but all creatures that suck will do it presently by instinct of nature as Chickins that never fed before will presently pick up their food and as for the excrements found in the Guts they are not excrements of the first concoction for they stink not but are gross blood that came from the Vessels of the spleen to the Guts and are dried there but now it is agreed by all since the truth is found out that the child in the womb is fed by its Navel only they differ about the food it lives on the Peripateticks say it is fed by menstrual blood which is the excrement of the last nutriment of the fleshy parts which at certain times is purged forth by the womb in a moderate quantity but primarily ordained for the generation and nutriment of the child But Fernelius Pliny Columella and Columbus deny this because such blood is impure and will where it falls destroy Plants and Trees Dogs will run mad that eat it and ofttimes hurts the women themselves causing swimmings of the head pains swellings and suffocations this then were ill food for a tender infant But to answer all If the woman be in good health her monthly courses are no bad blood for quality though they hurt in quantity being more than she can concoct and therefore she sends forth what is too much but if her body be ill affected the blood that stays in the womb is naught as well as that she voids by her terms but when the courses are not duly voided but stay in being stopt beyond their time of evacuation then they cause those ill effects formerly mentioned else not but women have not these courses the greatest part of the time they are with child nor yet when they give suck for the most part if the child be not fed with this blood what becomes of this blood when women are with child certain it is it turns into milk when time serves to suckle the infant with Yet Hippocrates was mistaken who says that the last part of the time the child lieth in the womb after it is quick it s fed partly by the mother milk but this is certain that the infant in the womb is fed with pure blood conveyed in the Liver by the Navel-vein which is a branch of the great vein and spreads to the small veins of the Liver And here this blood is more refined the thick gross crude part goes to the Spleen and Kidneys and the gross excrement of it to the Guts and that is it is found in the Guts as soon as they are born The most pure part goes into the hollow vein and from thence through the whole body by small branches this blood hath a watry substance with it as all blood hath to make it run and keep it from clodding and this water in men and women breaths forth by sweat so it doth in a child and is contain'd in the Lamb-skin as I told you This watry substance that is joined with the blood when the blood comes to the kidneys parts from the blood and is sent by the kidneys that make their separation by the Ureters to the bladder nor doth the infant piss as he lieth in the womb by the Yard but the Urine is carryed by the Vrachos a vessel to carry it which is long and without blood to the Allantois ●or skin that is made to hold the childs water in so long as it remains in the womb this Vrachos or passage goeth from the bottom of the bladder to the Allantois and hath no muscle belongs unto it that the child may void the Urine when nature requires but when the child is born it hath muscles at the root of the bladder to shut and open that we may make it not a meer natural but partly a mixed action to follow our business and make water not alwayes but when we please but this is not the course with the child continually for the first month the childs Urine comes out through the passage of the Navel but in the last month by the Yard but it never goes to stool in the womb because it takes no nutriment by the mouth After forty five days the child lives but moves not commonly he moves in double the time he was formed and is born in thrice the time after he began to move If the child be fully formed in forty days her will move in ninety days and be born in the ninth month but he receives daily more food after the third and fourth month to the day of his birth A child born in six months is not perfect and must die but one born in seven months is perfect but one born in the eight month cannot live because in the seventh month the child useth all its force to come out and if it cannot it must stay two months longer to recover the strength lost upon the former attempt that had made it too feeble to get forth in the eighth month for if it come not forth at the seventh month it removes its station and changeth it self to some other place in the womb these two motions have so weakened it that it must stay behind a month longer for if it come forth before it is almost impossible for it to live But Astrologers determine this business another way for they affirm that children born in the seventh month do live by reason of the compleating of the motion of the seven planets allowing one month to each of them beginning with Saturn thus Saturn Jupiter Mars Sol Venus Mercury Luna Now if the child come not forth at the seventh month but stay till the eighth month the Planets having ruled every one his month Saturn begins to rule again who is an enemy to conception in all his qualities and so the child born in the eighth month will be born dead or live a very short time yet other Philosophers maintain that Saturn is no enemy to conception but ruling in the first month by his influence and retentive faculty the child is fixed in the womb but as the celestial bodies have their influence upon the terrestial and upon all the elements they cause all the changes
here below and are not changed themselves for that the Heaven● and the fixed Stars and the Planets are still the same they were in the first creation and that the twelve Signs and Planets do rule over the bodies of men and women and how that Scorpio which is the house of Mars rules over the womb and makes it fruitful and that Leo is a barren Sign because Lions seldom bring forth young and so is Virgo for they are no maids that conceive with child But then why should not Taurus be a barren but a fruitful Sign when Bulls never bring forth any But not to trouble the reader with Astrological dreams I think it is not the seven Planets that by this complement of seven make the child to live but I should rather impute it to the perfection of the number seven which is easily proved by Scripture to be the most perfect number and will appear so to be by the Sabbath the seventh day of the week commanded for rest also the Sabbatical or every seventh year and the year of Jubilee seven times seven So that Hippocrates was out in three books where he endeavours to prove that a child born in the eighth month cannot live Aristotle Plutarch Galen and others were of the same judgement But to oppose them the writers of Spain Egypt and of Nanas prove the contrary by divers examples Hippocrates might be also misunderstood whether he meant Solar months that consist of thirty one days a piece or very near being the time the Sun is passing through the Zodiack or Lunar months the time the moon is in any Sign of the twelve and her stay there which is but twenty seven days with some few hours and minutes besides all this the woman Hippocrates mentions might not make her reckoning right for if you trust to womens account you can be at no certainty scarce one of a hundred can tell you true And as for Saturn who is so much blamed for playing the ill Midwife in the eighth month he is as much commended for his good office in the first month but there is no man or Planet that can alwayes have every mans good word yet I am of opinion they do him wrong but Astrologers may say what they please without reason for they never prove any thing but one dream by another Aries forsooth is not fruitful because it is the House of Mars and is not Scorpio which they praise for fructifying the house of Mars too Every Planet is maintained by them to rule the severai parts of mans body and that by degrees according to their signs and several Houses they are in I have found no Table concerning this business to have any truth in it wherefore I have drawn forth one exactly which you may safely rely upon if upon any Table at all and by this Table you shall find that every Planet when he is in Scorpio which signifies fruitfulness of the womb rules those parts of the body which are under the same Sign the two great Luminaries I mean the Sun and Moon excepted which do it by reception a clear proof that they have a great influence in framing the child in the womb and that the two Luminaries in that work mingle their influence one with the other The Table The first month Authors give to Saturn to retain the conception for he say they fixes the seed The Second month to Jupiter and upon him they lay the foundation of encreasing of sense and reason but the true foundation is then laid when the Seed of both man and woman are well mingled Mars rules the third month to give heat and motion to the infant Any Tooth good Barber The Sun governs the fourth month to give the child vital spirits yet Mars gave it motion a month before without any spirits at all I cannot understand there can be voluntary motion and no vital spirits Venus in the fifth month adds beauty the body we all know is fashioned in thirty or forty days but beauty must not come till three months after As for the sixth month that is Mercuries part to distinguish the parts of the child which Venus it seems could never do with all her beauty as if the child were but a Chaos and a rude mass till the sixth month yet it was very beautiful a month before As for the seventh and last month in the Planetary revolution that is the Moons part to make the child complete Here is much ado to small purpose It is no error I confess to impute much to the operation of the Planets But they are much mistaken about the times that such and such Planets do work for doubtless the Planets do not operate by succession as some would have it so that when one rules all the rest are idle and lie still but they cooperate and work altogether and that continually Their motion causes mutation for the motion of the Sun saith Potolomy of the Earth saith Copernicus distinguisheth night from day The Sun gives heat to all things here below the Moon moisture and our life consists in heat and moisture The Sun is the Sire of all living creatures and is first active in the seed of both sexes in the very middle of the seed and so he enlivens and moves every part to its proper action That which Aristotle speaks of the Heart the Microcosmical Sun in man's production is partly true both in and after conception to frame vital spirits and cause motion action For as the earth is preserved by the element of water from being scorched and burnt up by the beams of the Sun so the Microcosmical Sun the Heart but which is the Moon the brain or the Liver is hard to say adds moisture to this conception from first to last I mean as long as the child lives and thus the radical moisture is preserved Aristotle thought the brain by its coldness tempered the heat of the heart and for my part I think he said very true I see no man give a sufficient reason to the contrary There must yet be something to ballance the heat and moisture of the Sun and Moon and that they say is Saturn by his coldness for he fixeth them both in the work of conception and the dry bones are his work which are the Pillars and supports of this frail building But because there is no Generation but first there must be corruption for the corruption of one is the generation of another whereby it comes to pass that there is not a total decay in the world the beams of the Sun Moon working upon the seed of both sexes fixed by Saturn are purified and concocted by the equal temperament of heat and moisture that the Planet Jupiter le ts fall amongst them but then comes Mars with his heat and dryness and what is overplus in the conception as there must needs be some superfluities that Mars draws forth and turns to excrements and hardens into Coverings and Coats for
to its natural posture but if it come the feet forward and the legs abroad she must joyn the legs and feet together taking care that she remove not the hands from the place they should hang down close by the side If the infant with one or both the knees first strive to come forth she must put them back that both feet may first come down to the passage If the child come headlong with one hand thrust out then she must put the Child back with her hand upon the shoulders that the hand may goe to its natural place if this will not prevail lay the woman upright with her thighs and belly upwards that it may pass forth as it should do If both hands come out first she must thrust the Child back by the shoulders as formerly till the hands hang down by the sides of the Child If it would come forth arsewards the buttocks first she must return it back with her hands till the legs and feet may present themselves or the head first if it be possible which is most natural If the infant present both hands and both feet together to come forth so all at once she must take the Child carefully by the head and put the legs upward to take it forth If the shoulders come first she must put it back by the shoulders that the head may come first If it come the breast forward the legs and hands lying behind she must take it by the feet or by the head as she finds it to be most easy putting the other part upward that it may come forth right If a Woman have two Children at once that come together headlong she must take forth one after the other but beware the other retreat not back in the mean time so also must she receive them both that come together with the feet forward taking them out one after the other If they come one with his feet the other with the head forward at the same time she must receive that first which is most likely and next the passage and that which cometh with the feet first if she can receive last taking heed that they do not hurt one the other But let this general rule be observed still to annoint the passage with Ducks grease or Oyle of Lillies or sweet Almonds or such things as may smooth the passage and ease womans labour and Iikewise when she toucheth any part of the infant this will help much if there should be any aposthume in the place Particular helps to delivery are to lay the woman first all along on her back her head a little raised with a Pillow and a pillow under her back and another pillow larger than the other to raise her buttocks and rump lay her thighs and knees wide open asunder her legs must be bowed backwards toward her buttocks and drawn upwards her heels and soles of her feet must be fixed against a board to that purpose laid cross her bed Some woman must have a swathe-band above a foot broad four double this must be put under her Reins and two women standing on each side of her must hold it up straight and these two persons must lift up the swathe-band equally just when her throws come or else they may do her hurt and two more of the standers by must lay hold on the upper part of her shoulders that she may with more ease force the child forth The woman must hold her breath in and strive to be delivered and the Midwife must stroke down the birth from above the Navel easily with her hand for that will as I said before make the Infant move downwards CHAP. II. To know the fit time when the Child is ready to be born I Shall desire all Midwives to take heed how they give any thing inwardly to hasten the Birth unless they are sure the Birth is at hand many a child hath been lost for want of this knowledge and the mother put to more pain than she would have been Let not therefore the child be forced out unless there fall down an extreme flux of blood for in such cases it is best to save the Mothers life to drive forth the Child but there is great skill and care to be used or the woman were as good be set upon the Rack It is hard to know when the true time of her travel is near because many women have great pains many weeks before the time of delivery comes But I think the heat of their Reins is the cause of these pains but you may know whether the heat of their reins be the cause of it or not for if their legs swell their reins are too hot and the cure will be to annoint their backs to cool the reins with Oyl of Poppies water Lillies or Violets women whose reins are hot have alwaies hard labour A strong decoction of Plantane leaves and roots in water then strained and clarified with the white of an egg boil'd then to a sirrup with its weight in Sugar is excellent take a spoonful or two when you please or drink often the water and sirrups of Violets and water Lillies But if the birth be at hand you shall know when the skins Amnios and Allantois which as I told you serve to hold the sweat and urine of the child in the womb and by the means of which skins the infant is also supported in the Matrix do break by the violent motion of the child so that these excrements fall down to the neck of the womb Midwives call it the water and when that runs forth then the Birth is near this is the truest sign that is for when those skins are broken the Infant can no longer stay there than a naked man in a heap of snow These waters make the parts slippery and the birth easie if the child come presently with them but if it stay longer till the parts grow dry it will be hard therefore Midwives do ill to rend these skins open with their nails to make way for the water to come nature will make it come forth only when she needs it and not before but if the water breakaway long before the birth it is safe to give medicaments to drive the birth after the water But there are other signs of the birth approaching let the Midwife look well on the womans belly for if the upper part of it be sunk and hollow and the lower part big and full it is certain the child is sunk down again if the womans Throws be quick and strong coming from the reins downward all along the belly and not staying at the Navel but falling still lower to the groins and inwardly to the bottom of the belly where lieth the inmost neck of the womb this is another sure sign Then let the Midwife her hand annointed with fresh butter or with oyl of sweet Almonds put up her hand and if she feel the inward neck of the womb open or any substance to push
the Womb. Take two pound of the crumbs of the inward part of white Bread Cammomile flowers one handful Mastick two drams Cloves half a dram bruise them and mingle them well with some Maligo Wine and two ounces of rose Vinegar boil them to a Pultiss and lay it on a double Cloth to the Os pubis Purgations may not be used unless the belly be bound and then a gentle Glister or some Manna or Cassia about half an ounce is safe to give by Potion Slipperiness of the womb is cured by an injection made of Pomegranate pills boil'd in Oyl of Lillies Or take Mastick Myrtle Gallia moscala of each half a dram mix them with Goose-grease and Sheeps-Wool and sew them in a linnen cloth and make a pastry and tye a string to it to pull it out again when you have put it up into the place To strengthen the Matrix Take four ounces of the Oyl of Nuts Barrows-grease one ounce and half Cypress-nuts Mastich of each one dram and half boyl them all about five hours and with this annoint her belly womb and reins of her back BOOK V. CHAP. I. How women after Child-birth must be governed THere is great differences in Womens constitutions and education you may kill one with that which will preserve the other tender women that are bred delicately must not be governed after the same manner that hardy Country women must for one is commonly weak stomach'd but the other is strong if you should give the weak woman presently after delivery strong broth or Eggs or milk it will cast her into a Feaver but the other that is strong will bear it but tender women must be tenderly fed and nothing given them that is of hard digestion nor yet what they have no mind to provided that what she desires be not offensive but for the first week she lies in let her have boil'd and not roast Jellies and Juice of Veal or Capon but no mutton Broth for that may make her Feaverish let her drink barley water or boyl one dram of Cinnamon in a pint of water dissolving two ounces of fine Sugar in it if she will drink wine mingle twice as much water or two third parts with it but let it be white wine in the morning and Claret in the after-noon she may sometimes drink Almond-milk but beware of crudities Some women when they lie in are still sleeping some cannot sleep if she cannot sleep let her drink barley water well boyled not straining it at all but let her forbear it after the first week lest it nourish too much and stop the Liver Baths for Child-bed Women For the first week let her Womb and Privities be bathed with a decoction of Chervil a good handful boiled in a good quantity of water adding to it after it is boiled one ounce of Honey of Roses this will draw away the purgations and cleanse and heal the parts and it will take away all inflammations For the second week boil Province Roses put in Bays Wine and water and with this decoction bath her secrets Keep her not too hot for that weakens nature and dissolves her strength nor too cold for cold getting in will cause torments hurt the Nerves and make the womb swell Let her diet be hot and eat but little at once some Nurses perswade them to eat apace because they have lost much blood but they are simple that say so for the blood voided doth not weaken but unburden nature for if it had not come away long diseases or death would have succeeded some say Oat-meal Candles are good for them but oat-meal makes people troubled with the green sickness by its binding quality boyling will never make a binding thing to purge ill humours as they say it doth Child-bed Women but purging things by boyling may sometimes be made to bind Let her for three daies keep the room dark for her eyes are weak and light offends them let all great noises be forborn and all unquietness remembering to be praising God for her safe delivery First then so soon as she is laid give her a draught of white wine burnt with a dram of Sperma●cety melted in it Vervain is an herb that fortifies the womb it is fit to gather in May and June you may dry it in the Sun and keep it to boil with her meat and drinks you shall profit more in two daies with it than in two weeks without it If the woman be Feaverish boil Plantane leaves and roots with it and if she be not yet they will do well together for the heat of the one is tempered by the coldness of the other But if her purgations stop for Plantane take Mother of tyme. If her purgations be clotted and smell filthily or the after-burden be not quite come away boyl Featherfew Mugwort Penniroyal Mother of time in white wine sweetened with Sugar let her drink that new laid eggs and Sugar Penides are best for her to eat often of moderately and boyl Cinnamon in all her meats and drinks Let her talk little nor stir much especially if she be weak for six or seven dayes after she is delivered is a decoction of Mallows with a little red Sugar is a good Glister if she be too costive Crato prescribes Coleworts and Chrysippus makes them to be a universal remedy for all diseases but they are too windy for women in Child-bed After the first week if she be near clean of her purgations she may use Comfry and knot-grass in broths to close the womb that hath been so much opened you may use a little purging with them Therefore put in some Po●ypody of the Oak that is best leaves and roots both being bruised the quantities are almost at your discretion Sometimes pains encrease after delivery Hippocrates saith women are most subject to them after the birth of their first child some Physicians think it is by reason of the thinness and sharpness others from the thickness and sliminess of the blood but if you use the former directions these pains may be prevented What I said of Vervain before is a good remedy or else boil an egg soft and mingle the yelk with a spoonful of water of Cinnamon and let her drink it also a fume of the powder of bay-berries cast on a chafing dish of coals received at her secrets is a great help And for present ease boyl an equal quantity of tar and barrows grease together when it boyls put in a little pidgeons dung to it spread it on a linnen cloth and lay it hot to her reins she may drink half a dram of Bay-berries in powder in a quarter of a pint of Muskadel you may see by this that cold and wind cause these pains For Excoriation of the Privities Annoint them with Oyl of sweet Almonds or Oyl of St. John's wort which is better Against the Piles or Hemorrhoids Take Polypody bruised and boyl it with your drinks or meats Let her be let blood in the Saphena
this straitness as I said But the straitness of the womb it self and its vessels are sometimes natural by ill conformation and such women will miscarry in the fourth or fifth month because the womb that naturally stretcheth as the child grows in bigness will after the woman is delivered shrink as small as it was before in some women will not be extended But if the straitness be in the vessels or neck of the womb Conception is hindered because the terms cannot flow gross humours especially when the womb is cold and weak stop the mouths of the veins and arteries Inflammations or Swellings or Scars or Schirrhus or the like may be the causes sometimes thick Flegm abounds if there were a wound or the after-burden were forcibly pulled out If the terms be stopt from an old obstruction of grown humors the cure is hard a Schirrhus or humour that shuts up the vessels cannot be cured what is to be cured must first be done by general evacuations of purging and bleeding then use means to provoke the terms if the straitness come from diseases first cure them Sometimes the Secrets of women are full of pushes and scurf with itching and pain wheals rising in the neck of the womb They are of two sorts some are gentle but most commonly they are venemous and come from the foul disease and will impart it unto men They proceed from burnt sharp cholerick malignant humours hard to be cured Sirrup of Fumitory is very good in such cases it is also profitable to wash the parts with wine and Salt-Peter Draw blood if it abound first in the arm then in the ancle but first if be the disease drink the decoction of Sarsa and Guaicum for it Avoid sharp sowr meats it is good to purge with Confectio Hamech or Fumitory Pills You may see the cause of this great itching and scurf if you search with Speculum Matricis an instrument Chirurgeons use Sometimes Tubercles grow in the neck of the womb with heat and pain you may see them them for they are a kind of swelling wrinkles like the wrinkles you see when you close your Fist but they are much larger and when they swell they make these Tubercles they are usual in the secrets or Fundament and come from the same malignant causes with the former and some are more enflamed and painful than others are The swellings are hard proceeding from thick burnt humours Powder of egg-shels burnt is good to strew upon them to dry them up if they be new and there be no inflammation but if they be old and dry they must first be softened These wrinkled skins when they are many resemble a bunch of Grapes Cure the Pox first for usually that is the cause and then they will vanish of themselves If Medicaments prevail not some old authors bid us to use an actual Cautery and to burn them away Likewise Warts in the secrets are bred by a gross dreggy ill humour and is of kind with the forementioned Nature sends it forth to the outward skin and there it becomes Warts if they be hard or blew and painful you may know what they are the Pox is in them and hard to be got out and they lie where medicines can scarce be applied to them to remain if you apply sharp Topicals use a defensative of Bole and Vinegar that you hurt not the parts and so you may touch them with Aqua fortis or Spirit of Vitriol or of Brimstone There are several sorts of these Excrescences there are those that are called Myrmeciae leave an Ulcer if you cut them off Thymi Clavi will grow again but Acrocordanes leave no root if they be once cut away The powder of Mulberries is good to cure Warts and swellings upon the privities of men and I recommend it to women in the same cases Sometimes women have the piles of the womb like those in the Fundament they proceed from gross blood that staies about the ends of these veins in the neck of the womb Women that are thus troubled look pale and are very faint and weary this may come from too long flowing of the courses and grow thick and cannot get forth they are painful and bleed disorderly you may see them by the help of Speculum Matricis and touch them The cure is by revulsion of the humour by letting blood in the arm or heel and by gentle applications if the pains be great if nature open them and they bleed moderately you may give way to nature but if they run violently open a vein in the arm two or three times Purge with Rhubarb Tamarinds and Mirobolans mingled and use Topicals to stay the blood The blind Piles bleed not at all they are cured by letting young women bleed freely and by softening the parts with emollient Fomentations to open the veins and to dispel the humour made with mallows Marshmallows Cammomile Melilot Ma●lius Linseed Fenugreek Anoint where the pain is with butter Populeon and Opium if the pain be gone and they bleed not use Driers of Bole Ceruss Allum burnt Lead wash'd if the veins swell with blood rub them with Fig leaves or with Horse Leeches applied draw blood from them This disease of the Piles of the womb differs from the flowing of the courses because this is with great pain and moreover the courses run from the veins of the womb and the neck of it but the Piles are caused when the blood runs too much to the veins that force the secrets and either stops there or comes forth sometimes by them but some say they differ from the courses namely by their great pain but that they make the body lean if they last long and the blood comes not forth so orderly nor at certain periods and set times as the courses use to do Sometimes the womb hath Ulcers bred there some are cleaner and some again are sordid and malignant all hard to be cured They proceed generally from a virulent Gonorrhoea or the Pox but they may rise from inflammation by abundance of sharp corroding humors from abortion or hard labour or sharp medicines or when the after-birth is pulled out by force and rends the womb The pain of Ulcers is biting and increased by sharp injections of Wine or Honey and Water All Ulcers are hard to heal there because of the sensibility and moistness of the part and a light Excoriation or rawness will not easily be healed but eating Ulcers never are cured there almost but by Death Ulcers by Venery if they be cured you must first cure the Pox. All Ulcers in the secrets of Wombs may be cured if they be not Cankered and the way to cure them is by Purging and bleeding to cleanse and carry away and divert the ill Humours and moisture from the Womb if there be great pain abait that with Mucilage of Fleabane and whites of Eggs or an Emulsion of Poppey Seeds Warm Injections into the Womb will help forward the Cure made of
Barley Lentils Beanes Lupines of each one Ounce and two drams of Orris Roots and of Horehound Wormwood and a little Centry of each half a handful boil all in Whey strain it and put some Honey of Roses or Hydromel to it Turpentine washed and with Liquorish swallowed is good Drink Sheeps milk sweetened with Sugar Fumes made with Frankincence Myrrh Mastich Storax Calamita Juniper Gum received by a Tunnel do good if there be a jealousie of the Pox add a little Cinnabar but Pessariers with Opium must not be held in above half an hour for it will hurt the Nervous part of the womb a scruple of the Pills of Bdellium taken thrice a week may be profitable Vulnerary Potions drunk and astringent powders cast upon the Ulcers must not be neglected Sometimes there are long Ulcers in the neck of the womb like to those that eat the skin and are seen upon some mens hands and feet in Winter sometimes they are bleeding and sometimes very dry and have hard lips much labour and sharp humours to the parts may cause them when they are new they are easier cured use a good moistening diet if sharp humours cause them purge them forth and anoint the Ulcers with Oil of Linseed and Roses mingle them in a Leaden Mortar with juice of Plantane and the Yolk of an egg when they are hard anoint them with deers Marrow Turpentine wax and oil of Lillies when they are malignant they are cured as Fistulaes are if they itch or cause pain make an unguent of Populeum and Diapompholix of either one ounce Camphire Sugar of Lead of each a scruple when there is a great itching of the womb it is somewhat like the rage of it then eat Sallets of cooling herbs Purslain and Lettice with a few Spearmints oil and vinegar or take conserve of Mints and of Water-Lilly-Flowers of each an ounce Lettice candied six drams Agnus Castus seeds one dram and a half Coral one dram Rue feeds half a dram Camphire a scruple with sirrup of Purslain make an Electuary annoint the Reins and secrets with Galen's cold ointment with a little Camphire As for the womb it is soon ulcerated because the parts are soft and easily corroded and hard to be healed and these ulcers are of many kinds hollow crooked or strait if the sharp humors be retained it makes furrows and divides the parts which growing hard with a callous cannot join again thus it degenerates into a Fistula it may be without pain with hard Lips and an ill matter may be pressed forth of it sometimes it corrodes the bladder and then the water passeth forth by the Fistula and sometimes to the Fundament and the Dung is voided by it An old Fistula is harder to cure than a new and a crooked than a streight General remedies and a good Diet may do much and so leave the rest to nature to evacuate the excrements but use a palliative cure by often Sweating and purging twice a year and by Injections and Corroboratives laying on a Plaister of Diapalma After general meanes if it be not past hopes Vulnerary Decoctions may help made with Centaury Bettony Agrimony Ladies mantle and roots of male Fern. Topicks are useful first dilating the Orifice with Gentian Roots or with a Sponge then make soft the Callous with Turpentine wax Deers Marrow and Oyl of Lillies then consume the Callous which may be effected For a new narrow Fistula use black Hellebore Egyptiac or Vigo 's powder carried to it with a Pencil or Aqua Falopii or take Rose and Plantane water of each six ounces put to it Sublimate half a scruple set it on the Embers in a Glass but if the Fistula be toward the womb beware of violent means if it be foul and a hard Callous withall a Potential Caustick may do good but a Horrion is best all these are safe in the outward part of the Neck of the womb but in the inward there is greater danger A Cancer in the womb is seldome seen nor can it be ever cured but that which is in the Neck of the womb I shall instance in which is either with an Ulcer or without an Ulcer First It comes without an Ulcer but when long Applications are used to them hard schirrhus Tumours which spring from burnt black humours and Terms that flow to those parts chang to an Ulcerated Cancer Secondly It may be in the part not Ulcerated a long time and not be known because it is without pain but at length there will be a pain felt in the Loins and bottom of the belly the swelling looks blew and loathsome when it becomes Ulcerated it is worse and a thin black stinking matter comes from it If much blood flow from it that is dangerous there will be a soft Feaver red cheeks and loathing by reason of the vapours that rise from it Mild Remedies are not felt and strong meanes make it worse it growes harder daily keep it from being Ulcerated and you may live long with it Prepare and Purge Melancholy from whence it proceeds Use no sharp biting applications at first but onely Diapompholyx or juice of night shade Plantane or Purslane Give every day three or four Grains of a Powder made of Oriental Bezoar stone Saphyrs and Emeralds of each one dram in waters of Scabius or Carduus take also juice of Nightshade six ounces burnt Lead washt and Tutty of each two drams Camphire half a dram put Cray-fish powder to them and stir them well in a leaden Mortar An Injection made with a Decoction of Cray-fish is held to be very good and make a Cataplasm and a Fomentation with milk Saffron water Lillies Mallowes Marsh-mallowes Coriander Dill and Fleabane seed Arsenick and Antimony may be good in some remote parts but are dangerous here There was a Noble woman who had a Cancer Ulcerated upon her Face and sought for help from all Countries at last a Barber cut a Chicken in the midst and often applyed that and it drew forth the Ulciome and the Lady was cured The womb is very soon corrupted by the many ill humours that flow thither and it will quickly Gangreen and the parts mortifie the natural heat being extinguished by reason of some preceding Ulcer the neck of the womb will feel an unusual heat and a Feaver runs through the body the part is discoloured and neither beats nor feels any thing prick it or cut it it stinks The Party that hath it faints and decayes wherefore strengthen the heart with cordials and the principal parts least the Spirits be infected cut off the dead flesh stop the corruption by scrarifying it if you can come at it then wash the part with a decoction of wormwood and Lupines and Egyptiac apply Epithems to the heart it is worse when it goes to the womb than when it comes outward Some have had their womb fall out and yet recovered as to life which was before endangered The Neck of the womb is onely subject
to Ulcers yet sometimes the substance of the womb hath been Ulcerated and rotted away A dead child in the womb may cause an Ulcer but all these Ulcers and Rottenness are to be dealt withal as I have shewed before Sometimes there may be a Rupture of the womb I never saw but one and that was exceeding rare it happens so seldome The womb is so fenced by the adjacent parts that it is seldom wounded unless the Chirurgeon chance to do it in cutting the Child forth of the womb There is more pain in the neck of the womb than in the bottom of it but this cutting may be cured by Injections and Glisters for the womb made with Decoctions of round Birthwort Cypress Nuts boiled in Steel water and Astringent Wine and a little Honyed water and Agrimony Mugwort Plantane Roses Camels Hay Horehound If the pain be great use Anodynes or Pessaries made with a wax candle dipt in Vulnerary Oyntments as take Turpentine Goose Grease wax and Butter of each a dram Bulls Grease Deers Marrow Honey Oyl of Roses of each two drams I have refer'd all the foresaid Diseases to a natural or Accidental straitness of the mouth or neck or Middle of the womb all of them being a hinderance to Copulation and making compression upon the parts CHAP. VIII Of the Largeness of the womb THe opposite to straitness of the womb is the largeness of the Orifice and sometimes more Cuts than nature makes which may proceed from Copulation or bearing of Children By the largeness of the Orifice women are often barren and sometimes the womb falls out as Hippocrates saith Nor do men desire to keep company with such women The cure after Child-birth is with Astringent Fomentations and Bathes of Allum water binding things of Bole Dragons blood Comfrey Roots Pomegranat Flowers Mastick Allum Galls of each half a dram powder all and make a Pessary to thrust into the Orifice dipt in this Mixture made fit with steel'd water Hard Labour doth sometimes cleave the Privy parts as low as the Fundament whereby the rent is made so wide that it goeth from one to the other hole a long piece of Allum put into the cleft may do good to help it but if there be many passages in the secret parts it comes from an error in nature there being a passage open from the womb to the straight gut There are some diseases whereby Physicians are much deceived thinking the cause to lye in the womb when it doth not for womens stones and Vessels of procreation may be sorely distempered and their womb be no wayes affected with it Gasper Bauhin and John Scenkius tell us of a Maid whose belly was swoln as though she had been with child but when she died she desired to be opened to let the World know her innocency and it did so appear for her stones were swelled as big as a white penny Loafe they were blew and spungy and full of water The womb is sometimes subject to great paines besides what proceed from the former Diseases for there is that which is called the Cholick of the womb it is usual to women with child as the Inflammation of the womb is it binds the belly and stops the veins all women are subject to it either from sharp humours or from clotted blood that sticks to the hollow of the womb Drinking of cold drink may cause it sometimes it comes from retention and corruption of the seed that is cured as fits of the Mother If it come from ill humours that lye there purge them forth if from windy vapours that rise from the heat of ill humours these must be discussed give a Glister of Maligo wine and Nut oyl of each three ounces Aquavitae one ounce oyl of Juniper and Rue distiled of each two drams apply it warm lay on a plaister to the Navel of Tacamahac and Gum Caranna CHAP. IX Of the Termes THe Monthly courses of women are called Termes in Latin Menstrua quasi Monstrua for it is a Monstrous thing that no creature but a women hath them or else Menstrua because they should flow every Moneth and they are named Flowers because Fruit follows and so would theirs if they came down orderly they are then a sign that such people are capable of Children it preserves health to have them naturally but if they be stopt there must be danger when the woman is conceived then they stop they begin commonly at fourteen years old and stop at fifty or in some at sixty years old they are of no ill quality naturally but are onely superfluous moisture and blood the Female sex abounds withal for when they stop the Child in the womb is supplied by them The Termes run longer two or three dayes with some women than with others for they differ as women do according to plenty or less plenty of good diet and labour or idleness or the like Hippocrates saith They should bleed in all but two pints at most or a pint and a half the colour of the blood and substance differs according to divers tempers it should not be too thick nor too thin without any ill scent and of a red or reddish colour and the veins of the womb are the passages which are double from the Spermatick and Hypogastrick double branch on both sides to send forth superfluous menstrual blood from all parts of the body some say this blood is venomous and will poison plants it falls upon discolour a fair looking glass by the breath of her that hath her courses and comes but near to breath upon the Glass that Ivory will be obscured by it It hath strong qualities indeed when it is mixed with ill humours But were the blood venomous it self it could not remain a full month in the womans body and not hurt her nor yet the Infant after conceprion for then it flows not forth but serves for the childs nutriment We read of a child but five years old that had her monthly purgations and John Fernelius writes of one that was but eight years old that had them but certainly it must be a sign of a lascivious disposition and of a short life Some womens courses stop not only by conception but from other causes that have come again very well seven or eight months after but if the terms fail there is either want of blood or the blood is stopt but some refer the causes of stopping the courses to four heads viz. 1. Corruption of the blood 2. The Womb ill disposed 3. An ill habit of the body 4. An ill Custome of the faculties of the Body 1. If the Womb be diseased as it is subject to many the Terms will increase or diminish wherefore the womb must be first healed 2. If the blood be corrupt it will be too thick or too thin by reason of ill humours and ill diet 3. If the body be ill disposed it sends not blood as it should do some laborious Country Women become so hot and
than the child could retain or her purgations discharge wherefore it grows crude being superfluous and makes the parts swell so much that a man would think she were with child again but it commonly ceaseth if the woman be once largely purged either by the womb or the belly Hysterical or Mother fomentations are sufficient oftentimes to cure it or take a Sheeps skin of a Sheep new killed and wet it with sharp Wine and lay it on If in travel they keep ill diet the humours turn to Wind and they fall down to the legs and make them swell take heed of drink and when the purgations are over use things that expel wind take worm wood Betony Southernwood Origanum Cammomile Flowers Calamint Annis-seed Rue Carroway seeds boil them and make a fomentation for the feet If too much drinking be the cause let her abstain from that Medicaments that heat and resolve and are good for Dropsies are very good in this distemper the infusion of Rhubarb is much commended especially if the humour proceed from ill habit and course of life Hippocrates prescribes a Goats or Sheeps Liver made into powder and taken with wine of the infusion of Elecampane also Treacle taken with Fumitory and Fennel waters and to abate the swelling of the Feet make a decoction of Rose stalks and Cammomile Flowers excellent to bath them in and for her belly swelled lay on a Plaister of Bay berries or of Melilot or take Bay berries and Juniper berries of each one handful Goats Dung four ounces Cammomile Flowers powdered half a handful Cummin seed two drams pour spirit of wine upon them as you bruise them in a Mortar make a Plaister with a little oil of Spike added and lay it over the womans belly For the swellings of the Bellies of maids if it come not by a masculine blow take Dittany root and Cubebs bruise them and Cummin seeds and Cow Dung and lay it to their bellies as hot as can be endured Women after Delivery are also subject to have their Wombs inflamed when the birth is very great and their labour hard and the mouth of their Womb narrow so that great violence stretcheth it wider than they can suffer and sometimes there is great loss of blood and the womb is torn by putting forth of the child it must be cured by such things as ease pains as Baths and Fomentations and such softening things as are proper for the belly This following Anodyne is very effectual take Flowers of Mallows Marshmallows Vervain and Rue of each a handful Self heal Agrimony Cammomile Flowers Melilot tops red Roses of each a handful cut them very small sew them up in fine linnen bags boil them in Goats milk or equal parts of Plantane water and Wine press them well between two Trenchers and make application of one after the other hot to the place affected but first anoint the part with Poplar ointments or with oil of Roses after this cleanse all the secret parts with a spunge dipt in water of Oaken Leaves Self Heal and of Plantane made luke warm and injections put up with a Syring are effectual also of Mel Passarum and Plantane water mingled and cast in warm or take Galls Lentils Flowers of Pomegranates Seeds of Kneeholm Saunders and Roses of each a like quantity boil all in water and strain it and with a Syring inject the decoction and it will cleanse the Womb. When the Mother is cleansed it will be proper to make the flesh incarnate if it be corroded as take Centaury six ounces Orris Comfrey Roots Agrimony of each three handfuls Gum Tragant Sarcocolla Dragons Blood Frankincence Hypocistis Mummy of each a dram boil all in a sufficient quantity of water to the consumption of half then put to it Iron refuse prepared one ounce and a quarter boil it a while longer and bath the part with it If the womb be too hard and she feel pain between the Navel and the Matrix then take Ducks grease Deers or Ox marrow Neats Foot oil Yolks of eggs Bdellium of each a like proportion two drams of Saffron dissolve all in wine and mix oil of Lillies with them and dip a tent of Linnen or Cotten in this and thrust it up into the place use this often for this will ease it and take away the pain And if the womb be foul with Ulcers or the like take half an ounce of Oxymel of Squils sirrup of Vinegar and Bizantine of each three quarters of an ounce Agrimony and Lovage Waters of each one ounce water of Cichory two ounces let her drink this every morning early and sleep upon it and fast four hour after it the Urine will in a weeks time or somewhat longer become clean and well cleansed and the party cured Womens bellies use to be mightily stretched in Child-bearing in so much that they will be plaighted and full of wrinkles ever after that were plain and smooth before growing lank when they are delivered but if it be but four months past it may be helped by laying a linnen cloth over the belly dipt in oils of sweet Almonds Lillies Jessamine and if the belly be already wrinkled then take Goats and Sheeps Suet and oil of sweet Almonds of each one ounce Sperma Ceti two drams and with a little wax make an ointment when the Flux is past you may lay on the Cataplasie of Aetius or anoint with oils of Mastich and of Roses CHAP. XIII Of Cold Moist Hot Dry and of all the several Distempers of the Womb. THe wombs of Women should be alwaies kept temperate that they exceed not in any preternatural quality if they do the mans Seed will be like corn sowed upon sand and will prove unfruitful if the womb be too hot or cold or moist or dry Those that have hot wombs have but few courses and those are either yellow or black or burnt and fiery that come disorderly and such persons will fall into Hypochondriacal Melancholly and rage of the womb if this be from their birth it will be hard to cure yet it may by good Diet and proper means be much mended by Medicaments that cool and asswage Choler but take heed you do not cool too fast and stop the courses you may safely use conserve of Succory Violets Water Lillies Borage of each one Ounce Conserve of Roses half an ounce Diamargariton Frigidum and Diatrion Santalon of each half a dram with sirrup of Lemmons or Oranges or juice of Citrons take a Nutmeg in quantity at once twice or thrice in a day and anoint the back and loins with Poplar Unguent or oyl of water Lillies Roses Venus Navel wort Let her wear thin cloaths and use the cold Air let her avoid hot and salt meats Wine and strong drink eat Lettice and Endive and cooling herbs that she may sleep well The contrary to this is a cold womb and these are not fruitful they are too cold to nourish the seed of Man it is from the birth in
of the Terms there being so great consent betwixt the breasts and the womb you may feel the small kernels of the breast but that I speak of now is one unmoveable humor but the other are small If it lye near the skin it is soon dissolved but if it lye deep it will hardly be dissolved because the substance of it is so earthy first Purge then bleed after that apply softning and discussing remedies that are strong as you must do for a Schirrhus humor Take Orris Roots and boil them in Oxynel and stamp them mix them with Oyntment of Marshmallowes and Turpentine of each three ounces and one ounce of Mucilage of the seed of Fenugreek If you cannot discuss it ripen it or cut it open but take heed how you do it for this is troublesome and dangerous All these humors if they be unskilfully handled will soon turn to a Schirrhus from melancholy in the veins flowing to the breasts and it is thick flegm dried there are two kinds of it one is bred of Melancholy blood which is gross feculent or thick flegm mixed with it and this feels no pain but the other is not so hard for it is not yet fully come to its perfection and it is probable that it is mingled with other humors A perfect Schirrhus grows from the stoppings of the Spleen whereby the Melancholy blood is retained and being in great quantity falls upon the Breasts or else the courses stopt fly thither There is a double intention for the cure First Use emollient means to soften all that is hard and knotty in the breasts then keep a good Diet and beware of salt Meats and such as are smoak'd and hard of digestion and moreover all things of a sharp corroding faculty use moderate Exercise and Mirth provoke the courses if they be stopt and set on Leeches or bleed in the foot Sena and Rhubarb are good to purge the body well and when you have purged do so no more till you have used some Cordials as Conserve of Bugloss and Orange Flowers Confectio Alkermes Electuarium Degemus and Triosantules Sometimes flegm and melancholy are mingled to cause this Schirrhus but then it is but a bastard Schirrhus if burnt humors abound most it will be a Schrrhus if Melancholy a cancer Secondly The perfect signs of a Schirrhus are that it is very hard and feels no pain if it feel any it is not yet fixed it is coloured according to the humor white or black or blew a bastard Schirrhus is hot and painful if it go on it will be a Cancer and the Veins will swell and look blew if hairs once grow upon it there is no hopes of cure and the bigger and harder it is the more incurable Let general medicaments proceed and cure the cause from the Matrix and from the whole body soften attenuate and discuss the hardness but take heed of hot things that will discuss the thin parts and leave the thick behind neither use too many moistning softning means for that will ferment the matter and change the Schirrhus to a Cancer that is far worse but either soften and moisten and digest together or by turns A Fomentation of Mallows Marshmallows brank Ursine Camomile Flowers Linseed and Fenugreek are good anoint afterwards with oyl of sweet Almonds Hens grease Marrow of a Calf oyntment of Marshmallowes lay on the great Diachylon or the Plaister of Frogs take the Fume of a hot stone sprinkling wine upon it lay on a Plaister of Gum Ammoniacum dissolved in Vinegar of Squills a bastard Schirrhus will soon Cancerate Bleed purge away the humor that breeds black blood to hinder humors from flowing to it anoint with oyl of Roses and juyce of Plantane if it be hot beat them well in a mortar of Lead till they shew another colour then mix Ceruss and Litharge of silver one ounce with wax make an oyntment or take one ounce of Mallow Roots boil bruise them let Sheeps Suet and Capons greese of each two ounces be added to it with wax sufficient to make an Oyntment But the disease worse than a Schirrhus is a Cancer of the breasts and William Fabricius saith that if it be not an Ulcerated Cancer the woman may live above forty years with it and no pain molest her but if you lay on any thing to soften and ripen these swellings she will dye in half a year Many orderly women have lived long with Cancers as if they ailed nothing Hippocrates bids not to cure an occult Cancer if you do the person will dye of the cure because the breasts are loose and spungy Cancers are soon bred there Burnt blood flowing from the womb of one who is of a hot and dry Constitution and the Terms stopping after a Tumor they make an Internal or External Cancer A Cancer that comes naturally undiscerned is hardly known at first being no greater than a Pease and daily increaseth with roots spreading and Veins about it when the skin is eaten through it becomes a loathsome Ulcer the Matter is black and the lips are hard it is scarce curable because it is bred of black burnt blood that is malign and the Vessels are loosned and relapsed by softners and ripeners misapplyed to it so that the passage is made for the humors to pass to and fro and serve to infect the rest Purge melancholy and draw blood but use no Topicks to ripen or rot the part onely Anodynes that will take away pain as oyl of Frogs and Snails with Frogs ashes made to an oyntment with Nightshade water Ash●● of Crayfish or of the herb Robert or the i●ward Rind of an Ash-Tree Arceas shewes the way to cut them for 〈◊〉 and to burn the part if the Ulcer be deep ●…bricius bids burn the roots first and afte●wards to consume the Reliques and to sto● the blood when the root is cut up You must often Purge away melancho●●● humors and provoke the Courses or th● Cancer will return Mithridate and Treacle with juyces of Sorrel and Borrage and Cray-fish Broth and Asses milk are approved good to palliate the Cure and to keep it from going farther and ease pain This water is commended Take Scrofularia roots and herb Robert of each one handful Lambs Tongue Nightshade Bugloss Borage Purslane Bettony Eybright of each half a handful one Frog two whites of Eggs with Quince seeds and Fenugreeck each one ounce a pint of rose water as much of Eybright water distil them in a Leaden still Cancers must not be handled like other Ulcers for softners Drawers and healers exasperate and kill the woman with great dolour Fichsius his blessed powder against a Cancer is this take white arsenick that shineth like Glass one ounce pour on Aquavitae on the powder of it pour it off again and put on ●●●sh Aquavitae every third day for fifteen ●yes together then take roots of great Dra●on gathered in August or July slice them ●●d dry them in the wind
to to tell those that knew them before but by their leave they that know some things may be ignorant of other things what one knew before it may be another knew not and what she knew not another might know There are many things here that most women desire to know the reason is the same why all meats are eaten and all Maids may be married for if we all were taken with the same thing there could be no living in the world CHAP. VII Of the Diseases that Infants and children are often troubled with I. SOmetimes the child so soon almost as it is but new born will fall into strange throws and convulsions Hippocrates divides childrens diseases according to their several ages Children new born are subject to inflammation of the navel after it is cut to moistness of the Eares to Coughs and Vomitings and Ulcers in the mouth to Feares and watchings When the Teeth begin to breed there are Feavers Convulsions and Fluxes of the Belly chiefly when the Eye-Teeth breed when they grow older the Tonsils are enflamed the Turnbones of the neck are laxated inwardly they have short breath and are troubled with the stone in the bladder round wormes and Ascarides Strangury Kings-evil and standing Yards as they grow still new diseases come on as the Measels Small-pox some are Tongue-tyed until the Ligament be cut that is too short and hinders their Speech Use no strong Vomitings or purgings or Glisters to children nor bleed them but give them gentle means such are Suppositories and mild Glisters with a little Sugar and Milk give stronger Physick to the Nurse if need require to purge the child strong medicaments given to the nurse may endanger the child that sucks the breasts but weak purges are sufficient to do it good You may give the child a Glister thus take Mallows and violet leaves of each one handful flowers of violets and camomile of each a small handful boil them and take four or five ounces of the decoction and with four or six drams of sirrup of roses and half an ounce of oyl of Violets make it ready to give luke-warm or something more hot as it may well endure II. If a Child be troubled with flegme lay it not on the back for you may soon choak it but turn it to lie on one side or the other Keep the belly loose thrust up a suppository of Castle sope rubbed over with fresh butter to make it more smooth gentle to pass into the body a spoonful of sirrup of Violets afterwards will force down the flegme you may if the child be temperate in heat mingle half the quantity of sweet Almond oyl with half so much sirrup of Violets but rub the belly down with sweet butter as often as it is undressed III. If the childs Codds be swoln observe whether wind or water be the cause of it the water will sweat out if you chafe the part with fresh butter if it be wind swing the child well and dance it and put the decoction of Anniseeds in their drink but there may be many causes of the swelling of the Codds if wind be the cause the Codds will shew thin as a horn and be as stiff as a Drums head too much crying may cause an inflammation or bursting If the swelling arise from heat cooling herbs will cure it but for wind boil a handful of bay leaves of Dill Camomile and Fennel of each a handful Rue half a handful boil all in a quart of Beer wort to a pint strain it out hard and with the liquor boil as much Bean meal as will make a poultis putting to it two or three spoonfuls of oyl of Camomile apply it hot to the Codds IV. If the childs Fundament slip forth as it will oftentimes in many children when they are bound and strain to go to stool or have taken cold or the Muscles are relaxed by moisture when there is a looseness of the Belly and a Tenesmus or Needing then the Muscle that bindes up the hole will come forth if it come from straining it is easily cured at first but too much moisture causing it will be hard to overcome especially when the belly is loose for then the Medicaments are driven off For the cure then if it be swoln and will not be put in bath it first with a decoction of Mallows and Marshmallows or annoint it with oyl of Lillies then try to put it up having cast some astringents upon it or take Galls Acorn cups Myrtle berries dryed red Roses burnt Harts-horn burnt Allum and flowers of sowr Pomegranates of each a like quantity make a strong decoction in water and whilest it is warm bath the Gut with it and put it into its place and to make it flag up spread a little melted wax Frankincense and Mastick together upon a Linnen Clout and lay it to the Fundament so bind it on and take it off onely when the child goes to stool sprinkle the Gut with this following powder Of red roses and sowr Pomegranate flowers of each half a dram Frankincense and mastick of each one dram V. If the Infant be too loose bellyed and cannot contain its Excrements this proceeds either from breeding of Teeth and that is usually with a feaver or from concoction depraved and the nourishment corrupted or from much waking or great pain or Feaverish humors stirring in the body or when they drink or suck too much being over-hot taking cold may also bring a Looseness if the Excrements be yellow and green and stink some sharp humor is the cause of it When children breed teeth it is good to have the belly somewhat loose but if it exceed it must be stopt for the child will consume If the Excrements be black and the child feaverish it is an ill sign But a Sucking child needs not be cured so much as the Nurse mend her milk or get another Nurse and let her avoid green fruit and Meats of hard digestion When the child is past sucking then purge things that leave a binding quality behind will do it such are sirrup or honey of red Roses You may give a Glister of two or three ounces of the decoction of Milium and Myrobolans with an ounce or two of sirrup of dried red Roses If it proceed from a hot cause cleanse first then give sirrup of dried roses Quinces Myrtles Currants Coral Mastick Harts-horn or powder of Myrtles with a little Dragons blood and annoint the belly with oyl of roses of Mastick of Myrtles In a cold cause the Excrements will be white then give sirrup of mastick and Quinces with mint water and take half a scruple of Frankincense and of Nutmeg as much temper it with the juyce of a Quince and give it the child Lay a plaister to the childs belly made with the seeds of red Roses Cummin Anniseed and Smallage Barley meal and juyce of Plantane with a little Vinegar boil all together When the stools are red or yellow a spoonful
finger into his mouth and holding the nipple faster than they were wont when the tooth is coming forth the Gum is whiter than in other parts the watching breeds cholerick humours and inflames the body and brings a Feaver If the teeth be long before they can come forth children commonly will die of Feavers and Convulsion fits they that scowr have seldome any Convulsion When the gums are thick the teeth can scarce get forth wherefore soften the Gum with rubbing it with Honey and Fresh Butter or let the child chew a candle of Virgins Wax Let the Nurse keep a moderate Diet inclining to cold as Barley Broths Water-Gruel Lettice Endive Rear-eggs take heed of salt spiced meats and wine but anoint the childs Gum with a Mucilage of Quinces made with Mallows water or with the brains of an Hare XXII If the Gums be ulcerated let the Nurse rub the childs gums and Wheals and Pushes with her finger and anoint them with Hens grease Hares brains oil of Cammomile and Mel Rosarum or sirrup of violets with Plantane water and if the inflammation be great boil Pomegranate flowers Roses and Sanders of each two drams Allum half a dram in water strain out three ounces and dissolve in it the sirrup of Mulberries half an ounce If the Pushes and Wheals be white take Pomegranate flowers Amber Cypress nuts of each two drams Roses and Myrtle flowers of each half a handful boil them in water add to the decoction one ounce and a half of honey of Roses .. Sometimes there riseth between the Gums and the great teeth a little fleshy substance to consume that wash it with a deccoction of the roots of Plantain Bugloss Agrimony of each a handful Barley a small handful and red Roses a handful four Dates Flowers of Pomegranates two drams Liquorish one dram and a half XXIII Children are very much molested with destillations Coughs and Catarrhs if the humour be sharp and hot that falls from the brain the child will look red in the face if it be a cold humour much matter will run forth at the nose and mouth then keep the child resonably warm and give it Sugar candy with oil of sweet Almonds wash the childs feet with Ale boiled with Betony Marjoram Rosemary then anoint the soles of the feet with Goose grease rub the breast with fresh butter and oil of sweet Almonds and lay on warm linnen cloths for slimy humours give it a spoonful of sirrup of Maiden-hair or of Liquorish and Hyssop mingled Take also Gum Traganth Arabick Quince seeds juice of Liquorish and Sugar Pelets mingle them and in new milk let the child take of it every day Where the cause is cold that makes the Cough beat a little Myrrh to powder and give it the child with oil of sweet Almonds and a little honey when it comes from heat make a decoction of Raisins in water and with white poppey seed and Gum Dragant each two drams seeds of Gourds four drams beat all together and give the child a four penny weight in the foresaid decoction XXIV If the breath be short let it take an Electuary of Honey and Linseed and anoint the ears and parts about them with Olive oil XXV If the childs nose be stopt put a little Ointment of Roses and good Pomatum into the Nostrils to soften the hard matter Wash the inflamed or Gummy eyes that will not open with breast milk or Plantain and Rose Water Childrens moist brains breed moist humours that run to their ears make them clean with a rag and drop in Honey of Roses mingled with oil of bitter Almonds XXVI If the child new born be in great pain then rub it with Pellitory of the wall and fresh Butter or with Spinach and Hogs-grease and lay it to the Navel take care it be not too hot or make a cake of oils of eggs and of Nuts for the Navel give it a Glister if it need with Milk Sugar and the yolk of an Egg. XXVII Children are subject to all sorts of Feavers but chiefly to Feavers from corrupt milk and Feavers with breeding of teeth They have epidemical Feavers sometimes that cast forth the Meazles or small Pox the mothers menstrual blood is the original cause but the corrupt air stirs it up for as the air is pure or impure so these diseases are more raging or less It is oftentimes infectious and the humours so corrupt that worms breed under the scabs and corrode the bones and inward parts as hath been proved by opening some that died If it be a Feaverish time that it spreads much give good Antidotes and change the air but all children almost will have them first or last Before there is a Feaver you may fortifie nature and give a a gentle purge but for my part I approve not of purging or bleeding in these distempers unless it be long before So soon as you see the feaver drive them out by Cordials and prefer the eyes and throat and prevent deformity The first signs of this disease for they are both from one cause are pains of the head redness in the eyes a dry Cough with a feaver then little pimples break forth all the body over but chiefly they aim at the throat and face The small Pox is dangerous to all but most to those that are of an ill habit of body and if they come forth in heaps and not orderly or if they look blew black or ill coloured they are exceeding dangerous If the child suck the nurse must use a moderate diet she may eat Hen broth with herbs of Succory Borrage Bugloss and Endive boiled in it Let her drink this drink following to make them come easily and quickly forth take peeled Lentils half an ounce fat figs two ounces Gum Lac two drams Gum Traganth and Fennel seed of each two drams and a half boil this in fountain water strain it and sweeten two pints of it with Sugar and sirrup of Maiden-hair let her drink half a pint fasting If the child be weaned give it a Julep of cordial waters two ounces and a half sirrup of Lemmons one ounce use this often and four or five hours after give it some Unicorns horn and Oriental Bezoar in powder To preserve the eyes anoint the Eye-lids with Plantane and Rose water and a little Saffron To preserve the nose take Rose water and Betony of each one ounce Vinegar half an ounce and as much powder of peels of Citrons add to it Saffron six grains let the child smell to it often dip some cotton in it and stop the ears to keep the Small Pox from thence You may preserve the mouth the tongue and the throat with a handful of barley and leaves of Plantain Sorrel Agrimony and of Vervain of each a handful all boiled in water to six ounces dissolve in it sirrup of Pomegranates and of Roses of each half an ounce Saffron half a scruple make a Gargarisme sirrup of Juniper of Violets and of water-Lillies