De Morbis Foemineis, THE Womans Counsellour: OR, The Feminine Physitian.

MODESTLY Treating of such occult accidents, and secret Diseases, as are incident to that Sex, which their too much modesty, too often to their sorrow, causes them to conceal from others; for a Remedy whereof, they are here taught to be their own helpers; espe­cially in these particulars: Of barrenness and Aborti­on: of natural, and unnatural Births: of the sup­pression of the Termes, the immoderate Flux there­of and other infirmities.

Dicere quae puduit, Scribere jussit.

With a brief Appendix, touching the Kindes, Causes, and Cures of Dropsies, and Tympanies of all sorts.

Translated out of Massarius de morbis Mulier.

By R. T. φιλομαθης. [...]

London, Printed for John Streater, and are to be sold by the Booksellers in London, 1657.

To the Reader.

Courteous Reader,

I Am now to write to two Sexes, both Masculine, and Feminine: This Treatise is composed use­ful for both Men and Women; for men who are English Students, in the ex­cellent works of nature, the knowledge of Physick, who want some English sub­ject of this nature, there being nothing of it yet extant. And this Authour com­ming to my hands, almost worn out with the Canker of Time, I have bestowed the pains to new dresse, and revive with ma­ny additions; there being no subject more useful.

To the Feminine Gender, Women of all sorts, be they Maids, Wives, or Wi­dows, what private and occult infirmi­ties they are subject to, are here descri­bed, with their causes and Cures, Those that are, or intend to take on them the honourable practice of Midwives, may be instructed in some difficulties that will happen in their Offices, whereby they may be helpful to those they undertake; I mean not the Theorical part of a Mid­wives Office and Duty: what appertains to that they are sufficiently, and excel­lently directed, by that late deceased, and yet living English Apollo, Mr. Cul­pepper, in his Midwives Directory; and here followes the practical part directing what means is to be used in any accident there, or that followes, or precedes Child­birth.

I have bestowed the pains plainly to English the Receipt of every Medicine, in words at length, and not in figures, that every one may understand them; and thereby over modest Maids and VVo­men may help themselves in many pri­vate infirmities, which oftentimes they [Page]languist under, and will not disco­ver. Then make use hereby, as you have occasion; and as you finde the Bene­fit, give God the prayse, who hath given power to his weak Creatures, the Herbs of the Field to be your helpers, and pre­servers, which is the desire of

R. T. [...].

A TABLE OF THE Contents of the Chapters.

  • OF Womens Diseases in general: The Introduction. Chap. 1.
  • Of the Menstrue or Termes. C. 2.
  • Of the suppression, or stopping of the Termes. Chap. 3.
  • Of the immoderate Flux of the Termes. Chap. 4.
  • Of the Flux of the Womb, or the Whites. Chap. 5.
  • Of the Fits of the Mother, or suffocati­on, and drawing up of the Matrix. Chap. 6.
  • Of the falling down of the Womb. Chap. 7.
  • Of natural Conceptions. Chap. 8.
  • Of Barrenness. Chap. 9.
  • Of monstrous and unnatural births. C. 10.
  • Of the unnatural fleshy Conception in the Womb, called Mola. Chap. 11.
  • Of weakness of Children in the Womb. Chap. 12.
  • Of Mischances, and to prevent the same. Chap. 13.
  • [Page]To expel and drive forth a dead Child out of the womb. Chap. 14.
  • Of hard Labour find meanes to procure easie Delivery. Chap. 15.
  • Of superfluity of milk, and other acci­dents happening after the Birth, as sore breasts. Chap. 16.
  • Meanes and Remedies for Nurses that want milk. Chap. 17.
  • Of Dropsies and Tympanies, an Appendix.

THE WOMANS COUNSELLOUR.
The Introduction.

Chap. I. Of Womens diseases in generall.

THis being a Subiect, which too much modesty, or indeed as it is, simple folly of many of the female Sex, hath hindred them from attaining to; and others, to fill their purses, have, and do still endeavour to conceale; But the want thereof being much, and the benefit great to save the health, and sometimes the lives of many poor women, whom God made as like himself, as he did the greatest Queen in the world; is the cause of bringing this so much necessary work to eve­ry [Page 2]ones capacity. And to treate peculiarly of the Diseases, and Infirmities incident to women, which as they want a particular Treatise, so they require a peculiar and proper Cure,Hipp. I. de morbis mul. 331. as Hippocrates at large teacheth: For the women do much differ from the men, from their beginning, and therefore do labour under, and suffer many Diseases peculiar and proper only to that Sex; which men can never surfer, neither are they incident to them. Wherefore, Is it not re­quisite to call such infirmities wo­mens diseases, and for them to in­stittute not only a proper Treatise, but a special Cure? Neverthelesse, it hath been, (and perhaps still is) contended against by some learned and famous men, who would ac­count this Treatise needlesse, and seem to averre, that there is no such vast distinction to be used between the Male and Female; but their Diseases having only respect to the Sex, may be cured by one and the same general method. And this [Page 3]indeed may be true in some common and generall Diseases usual to both sexes; but in such infirmities as ap­pertain only to the women, and are not at all contingent to the men, their falsity plainly appears. And there­fore Galen, Hippocrates, & Dioscorides, and many others, have taken the pains to write whole Commentaries meer­ly upon the Diseases of women; but yet their works are much incused by the corruption of time, though full of much variety of speech, gravity, and excellency of Learning.

This Treatise of the Diseases of wo­men, is so occult, intricate and diffi­cult to perform, that there is nothing to be found in all the Cabinets of na­ture, or secrets of the medicinal Art, more abstruse and difficult. The causes of this are many, as Hippocrates numbers them in his Book,Hipp. de morbis mul. pag. 331. De morbis mul. pag. 131. The first cause is, that women carry Diseases a long time a­bout them, and root it in them, and yet are either voluntarily, or foolish­ly ignorant thereof; either they do not know, or else are so superfluously [Page 4]modest as they will not discover the same, until time and necessity, too late to their pain, teaches them to know them by experience. And from hence it followes, that their Cure is not onely difficult, but oftentimes their Diseases are incurable.

The second cause Hippocrates num­breth to be this; That a great many women that are troubled with some secret Disease, and do well know the same, yet are so shamefac't and modest as rather to suffer under the same, than to communicate their minds to the Physician. Whereas he that wears the shoo best knows where it wrings; and amongst other Causes, the in­formation of the Patient, discovers to the Physician the knowledge, and so consequently, the Cure of the Disease may be the easier effected. Now the Physician being destitute of that help, by reason of the silence of the wo­men, the knowledge of the Disease is the more hard to find out, and conse­quently the Cure more difficult.

This also may be added for a third cause, the too much verecundity or ti­midity [Page 5]of the Physicians, dealing too carelesly with the women, being too shamefac'd, or bashful to deal plainly with them, and to inquire of them diligently and perfectly, the causes of their infirmities, and also absconditos locos suos attingere & tractare, which is necessary and needfully required. Of which negligence, Hippocrates doth much reprove and reprehend many Physicians, who do not accurately and carefully study to search out, and un­derstand the true Causes of womens Diseases, without the knowledge whereof, their going about to Cure them, is rash and indiscreet.

But to passe by these Causes, which, are of no small moment, it will not be amiss to add another, that the ig­norance of Midwives, not knowing the internal secret parts of nature, nor how to exhibite in word or outward remedies, may cause to the women difficult and hard labours.

From all which, is consequently gathered, that the Causes finding out, the matter and knowledge of womens Diseases, containeth in it many secrets and great difficulties.

But these difficulties carry with them, and comprehend in themselves a recompence of jucundity and profit; For what is more delightful to man than to understand so great secrets and mysteries of Nature? And what can be more profitable to a Physician than to finde out and know the way and manner of curing, and helping the infirmities and diseases of women? For since that the infirmities which do most frequently afflict mise­rable women, are very many most a­cute and grievous, in so much that their complaints may be heard almost con­tinually from the very Womb; cer­tainly Physicians in the study of their Cure shall not only gain great esteem and honour, but much profit. This therefore induceth me to render this Treatise plainly in the English tongue, that the women themselves may be their own Physicians.

The first thing therefore here inten­ded to be handled is of the Concepti­on of man; and therein the first thing to be noted, is the distinction and difference of the Sexes of man and wo­man, [Page 7]without which no Conception can be had, nor the Course of nature maintained; of which that it may be fully and perfectly understood by you, we shall speak plainly; I say therefore as the Philosophers teach, that all things whatsoever that are, have a two­fold ens or being, some ingenerative incorruptible, eternal as Intelligen­ces and Heaven: others generative corruptible and momentary, as these inferiour Elements, and those things which consist of the Elements.

Although the Elements, as to the whole, are ingenerative and incorrup­tible, neverthelesse, according to the parts they are generated, and corrup­ted, and are subject to continual trans­mutation. But the Cause thereof is the materia prima, or first matter, which alwaies desires new forms as the Phy­losophers in their Physicks every where teach. But to let passe all other circumstances,Gal. 14. cap. 11. Galen tells you, there was a man so studious in the secrets of Nature, as to seek if it were possible to be immortal, and bring immortality upon the Body. But the materia pri­ma, [Page 8]or which, if you will, call it God himself, knew this to be unlawful, and this Galen sufficiently declareth;Gal. 1: cap. 1. For that which consisteth of Arteries, Veins, Nerves, Bones and Flesh, is the compound of Nature, and therefore is subject to corruption, for the Fra­bricatum or building of Nature, is a plain way, yet impossible to bring a man to immortality, his structures are subject to fall. The greatest of Ci­ties, and the wisest of men be their Counsels never so great, or their peo­ple never so many, and their wisdom and their providence never so much, time will bring them all to nothing. Therefore the workes of Nature are wonderful, as, that as one dies, another lives, and instead of one ano­ther succeeds; and by that Rule you may call nature to be immortal, but this is no other but the continual Ge­neration of mankind:Gal. 6.7.14. 3 De usu part. so teacheth Phi­losophy, and so the learned write. There is no part of the Body, but is necessary to be used, and competent to the protection of life, as the Brain, the Heart, the [Page 9]Liver, the Eyes, the Nose, the Ears, but if we should particularly instance the primum mobile of Nature, we must then speak of the four principal parts which carry a distinction between the Male and the Female, and are the preservers and continuers of man­kind.

I'le presume so much modesty as to give you these tearms in the old tongue,Turner. my meaning cannot be un­known, 'twas lawfull for Ovid to write what he would not speak, and you may know my meaning; the parts following which we must treat of, are the maintainers and conti­nues of the World before the confu­sion of Babel, called pudenda, testes, utert.

You know my mind, if you do not his, in English, such things as have the best sense of feeling.

Of this which we said before, we in­tend only to discriminate the Sexes, without which no Generation can be had in any Creature whatsoever, with­out the perfect mixture of Male and Female.

And therefore Aristotle in all his works,Arist. de gen. c. 2 counted the Earth to be the Mother of all Creatures, the Sun the Father and begetter of them: so saith likewise Plato, and all others, that the Man and the Woman consist of two Elements of the Sun and Moon; the Father and begetter to be the Fire or Sun, the woman or conceiver to be the Earth or Moon, of which the whole World is built and consists.

As the Macrocosmus or great world consists,Turner. and is properly supported by the Sun and Moon, which are the male and female of the same great World. so the Microcosmus Man, by the woman which is the Moon of the man, and the Earth of the Microcos­mus, and the field of his generation, products the continual generation of mankind. To speak of the differences of Sects and parts between man and woman, would take up a Volume in Philosophy, beyond our present inten­tion, which intends only the in­firmities incident to the Moon of the man, or that Creature which we call a woman; Something may be said how [Page 11]the Sun and Moon of the Microcosme, or the man and the woman differ in parts and nature, Philosophy largely teacheth it, but we say no more but only they differ in Faculty. For the Man or the Sun of the Microcosme, hath a power or faculty to ingender in another, that is, in the Moon, but the woman hath also a faculty in po­wer of generating, or bringing forth in her self, by the help of the Sun her husband, without which mutual con­junction no Generation can be had.

I hope you have wit enough to know what I mean by the Sun and the Moon, that I may not be forc'd to English one thing twice: and if you be Men or Women, then know that by the Sun I mean the Man, and by the Moon the Woman; which if she be a whore, I cannot help it. That's an Eclipse to the microcosmical Sun; And as these two differ in Sex, so they differ in Nature, and in the several Faculties of Nature, and Members belonging to procreation, and Generation of Crea­tures accomodated the one to the other; but if you will take the di­stinction, [Page 12] Aristotle he calleth them in Women Pudenda and uterus, and in Men Testes and Membrum virile. Testes signifies properly, witnesses; and a man without such witnesses will have bad success in his cause,Turner. if women be of the Jury. And therefore the first Mover and Maker of all things knew it necessary, to have a procreati­on of Mankind, for the continual sup­ply of the World, which should be as well Male as Female; and therefore he made the Woman, and fitted her answerably to be accomodated to re­ceive the Instrument of the Microcos­mical Sun the Man, necessarily fit­ting one to the other for the Act of ge­neration, and this was the cause why 'twas thought not fit, the Man should be alone, for if he had been so, the World had ceased in him: and 'twas not only sufficient to make a Man and a Woman so, and furnish them with Instruments proper to conjunction and copulation; but also, that as well in the Man as in the Woman, there should be a desire, and magnetical attraction to the Act of copulation, [Page 13]by a sympathy between themselves; or else, the very Act it self would be ab­horred, and the species of humane Ge­neration frustrate, and come to no­thing, by an abhorrency of the Act it self naturally as it is, whereby the in­tention of Nature would have fallen to the ground, and one Man, and one Woman onely, been made in vain. Therefore the sagacity of Nature, to cause propensity in both Sexes, to the Act of Generation for procreation sake, endued both with a reciprocal pleasure, and delight in the Act of Coition it self.

And this propensity and pleasure, is not ordained in men and women on­ly, but in all other Animals, to main­tain a continual succession of genera­tions amongst them: as appears by the great fierceness, and earnest desire of all Creatures to this Act, of which the Philosophers largely write; but we passe, it as not pertinent to our pre­sent intent, and come to speak of the menstrual or monethly Courses, by the natural constitution whereof, all women are more or lesse weak or [Page 14]strong, diseased or sound, more or lesse able and meet for Conception accor­ding to the species or degrees thereof.

Chap. II. Of the Menstrua or Terms.

ARistotle delivers,Arist. 1. de gen. Anim. cap. 19. that the Men­strua is an Excrement, and in proportion as the Seed of man; and that they happen to Women at the same age as the men begin to have Seed; And that the humours of the Terms are purged forth by Nature, as superfluous and unprofitable: there­fore they may be comprehended un­der the general notion of an Excre­ment the principal use thereof is, for generation sake, which is the first In­stitution thereof, the Birth desiring a copious matter for nutriment.

The Terms generally begin in all Women,The time about the fourteenth year of their age, about which time also Men begin to have Seed, and both [Page 15]men and women change their voice, and are subject to many other muta­tions in their Bodies. And they cease, as the same Philosopher writes, about the 50th. year, seldome longer conti­nuing.

The time of their flowing, is not in all alike, for some have these purgati­ons but one day, others two, three, and four dayes, according to the age and temperament of the Woman. For sometimes they flow more, and some­times lesse: sometimes longer, some­times shorter. In women that are sound of body; they moderately flow two or three dayes, if any longer or shorter time, that Woman is sickly, or barren.

And so much for the Terms in ge­neral, we will proceed now to speak of the suppression or stopping there­of.

Chap. III. Of the stopping, or suppression of the Terms.

WHereas by the institution of Na­ture, it is necessarily provided, that all Women should ha [...]e their monethly natural purgations, by rea­son of the temperature of this Sex, and many other causes: but if they be supprest or stopt, there followes to that Woman much peril and many sicknesses, but on the other side, if they have their purgations according to the law of Nature, it keeps them in health, and preserves them from many Disea­ses.

The Cau­ses.The Causes of the suppression of the Terms, or diminishing of them are principally four,

  • The first is, the vitiousness of the Womb, and of the Vessels pertaining thereunto.
  • The second is, the vice, or corrupti­on of the blood.
  • The third, the viciousnesse of the whole Body.
  • [Page 17]The fourth and the last are, the vi­ciousness and the Faculties of the Bo­dy, to which all other causes may be referred.

First therefore, the Terms are sup­prest, or diminisht by reason of the Womb, and the Vessels belonging thereunto, by which the Terms ought to be purged; if therefore the Womb labour under any Disease, which may be many, as that if the substance of the womb be too hard or too thick, other­wise then is agreeable to Nature, that causes a stopping of the Terms, that must be brought to a better habit, with fit medicaments, and used in time for a convenient remedy.

Secondly, there doth happen Di­seases of intemperateness, which are various, simple and compound, some with matter, and some without mat­ter, under all which the Womb may labour, partly by Nature, and from the Birth, and partly growing in time against Nature, as hardnesse and thicknesse, of which we have spo­ken.

Of these Causes, the Simple are [Page 18]cold and dry, the Compound hot and dry; both which, may stop the Terms, cause the Womb to grow thick and hard, destroy the blood and impedite the natural purgation.

Then there are Diseases of intem­peratenesse with matter, as Inflamma­tions, Swellings, Tumours, and Can­cers against Nature.

Then there are other Diseases, as Ulcers, Fistulaes, Imposthums, and the like, which the Womb is subject to, which also impedite the Terms.

The second cause of the suppression of the Terms, is corruption of blood, which may be either too thick, or too glutinous, by reason of the vicious thickness of the humours, the Diet and many other causes frequently hap­pening.

The third Cause, which causes Wo­men many times, not to have their Purgations at all, is the viciousnesse of the whole Body, that it sends not blood sufficient to the Womb for this matter to be digested of; the humour inclining to other parts of the Body, either caused by ill Diet, or too much [Page 19]exercise, as often happens in some rustick Women; whereby their tem­perament becomes too hot and dry, almost inclining to the nature of men.

Another Cause of the suppression of the Terms, is the weakness of the Wo­men in general, whereby the blood wanting power for Concoction runs to some other parts of the Body; and so long as the Woman labours under that weakness, the purgations are hin­dred, if not altogether stopped. But thus much may suffice for the Causes, we shall now proceed to the Sym­ptoms, Prognosticks, and Remedies to be used in the helping this infir­mity.

Though outwardly no visible sign may appear, but only the meer relati­on of the party afflicted; yet the differ­rences thereof, may be judged by the Causes, and Accidents attending it, and the part of the Body thereby af­flicted. Whether the whole Body be vitiated and diseased, or the defect be in the Womb, or Vessels, as that the Mouth of the Womb be distorted [Page 20]and turned aside out of its due place, or some other impediment there a­bout; or if there be a perpetual sup­pression of the Terms, then it plainly shows such a Woman to be absolutely barren.

If the Obstruction come by weak­ness of the Vessels, and expulsive po­wer then that is perceived by immode­rate heat, great thirst, a swift and strong pulse, head-ach, and many other signs of heat.

But if the cause thereof happen to be from cold, then the Woman is dull, drowsy, and much given to sleepiness, but without any thirst: the pulse beats very slow, and the Urine is of a loath­some colour.

If the Disease proceed from some inward cause, it is discovered by the fatness or leanness of the party.

This Obstruction usually brings to the party afflicted, not only barren­ness, but oftentimes the Falling-sick­ness, Suffocation, Swellings and Im­postumes of the Womb, and the other parts appertaining thereunto, much dulness and drowsiness over all the [Page 21]Body, Coughing, difficulty of brea­thing, the Dropsy, detention of the Urine, costiveness, heaviness of mind, pain in the Head, and many other in­firmities.

Now therefore, to proceed to the Remedies to be administred for Cure of this infirmity, it will be very fit and necessary in the first place, to loosen the Belly; which may be done by Glisters, which dissolve wind, and gently loose as thus:

A Glister for the stopping the Terms.

Take flowers of Camomile and Mugwort of each one handful; Anni-seeds and Fennel-seeds, each an ounce, and make a Decoction thereof.

Then, take of this Decoction a pound, or a pint, which you please: three drams of oyl of Camomile and brown Sugar to make it a Glister; so give it.

Hiera Piera, is much cōmended in these cases, to purge the Excrements of the Vesicles, and remove those grosse humours.

A proper Receipt thereof may be thus, to provoke the Terms.

Take the Species of Hiera, or (if it be lawful for me to speak English; and that 'tis a hard matter to do of such ugly unsignificant words, as purblind Physicians have devised)

Take four ounces of the powder of Hiera pi [...]ra, and mix it with honey of Roses, or syrup of Roses, a sufficient quantity to make it into a Bolus.

Also, take of the same simple Spe­cies, or plain powder of Hyera, two drams, that is, a quarter of an ounce; and mix it with a sufficient quantity of syrup of Betony, that it may be made a Bolus.

Another.

Take three drams of solutive syrup of Roses; and a sufficient quantity of the Decoction of Citron-seeds; make it into a Potion or drink, which you please, & take it immediatly after the Hiera Bolus before directed.

Another excellent, is this.

Take of the powder of Hiera picra three drams; of the Electuary called Lenitivum, and Cassia newly drawn, three drams; mix it into a Bolus with fine Sugar.

Be pleased to give me leave to tell you what a Bolus is;Turner. for It is a tearm Physicians have caught by the end, without sense or reason, to fright you with. Bolus, is a Latin word, and sig­nifies as much in English as to say, a mouthful or morsel, or as much as one can swallow at once, so that you may make it a Pill or Electuary, which you please: for you know both are to be swallowed.

Some do refuse the use of Cassia to be administred in such cases, and condemn it; but being well admini­stred with Hiera piera, it is very com­modious for this disease.

The opening of a Vein, or letting of bloud, is very proper for this Di­sease, if it appears that there be a ple­nitude, or corruption thereof; it is [Page 24]properly to be drawn from the lower parts of the Body,Give me leave to be so mo­dest as conceale that. as the Foot; some­times from the Thighs and Venis Cu­biti, et ab utero; you may imagine my meaning though I speak Latine: but I say, the superfluous blood must be drawn out, and that downwards, or else it will endanger to spoil the Bo­dy.Sub ma­trice.

Ligature and binding of the Thighs, is also requisite in this case, and to keep the same bound to draw down the blood.

Also, if the Veins in the Matrix be obstructed and stopt, and the humour of blood abounds, it is requisite that there be a Vein opened, to take away the blood, and that there be other means used to diminish the same, as laxative and opening Medicines, using abstinence and exercise, as need re­quires; but where no order nor absti­nence is used, never expect a good re­medy.

But take it for a general Rule, that at first you begin to provoke the Terms, with gentle and lenitive mo­ving Medicines, afterwards, if that [Page 25]do not the work, proceed to stronger by degrees, alwaies having due respect to the age and strength of the person.

For young and tender persons ge­nerally, this is a gentle mover of the Terms; syrup of Betony, of Mugwort, of honey of Roses , the decoction of Betony, and Hysop, Ceterach.

Simples gently provoking and mo­ving the Terms: which are warm by nature, are accounted these;

Smallage roots, Fennel roots, roots of Butchers broom, of Parsly, Madder, Asarabacca, Valerian and Elecam­pane;

The seeds of Lupines, Sperage, Parsly, Smallage, Annis, Fennel, Co­min.

Of herbs these, Cinquefoile, Mug­wort, wild Mints, Harts-tongne, Mar­jerom, Fetherfew, Wormwood, Juni­per, wild Time, Lovage, Maidenhair, Southernwood, and washt Turpen­tine.

Stronger Simples to provoke the Terms, are; Hemlock, Rue, Cento­ry, Savin, Euphorbium, Sagapenum, Ammoniacum, Mirrh, Assa foetida, [Page 26]Mustard-seed, Celandine roots, Colo­quint, Pepper, black Hellebore, Bo­ras.

These with the former, are to be used in powder, Syrrup, Juyce or De­coction, but beware you be not too busie in medling with some of the last mentioned, lest you repent it.

A Syrup to Concoct, and prepare the humours, to provoke the Terms.

Take Syrup of of Betony, of Mug­wort, and Elecampane, of each half an ounce; of the Decoction of Hysop, and Betony, of each four ounces; mix them together, and so take it when you please.

Odoriferous things which provoke the Terms are, Cynamon, Cassia Lig­nea, Costus roots, Muscus, Spica Indiae, Spica Romana, Gallia muscata, and such like.

Fumes to be burnt to move the Terms are,

Oppoponacum, Soponoria, Frankin­cense, Lignum Aloes, and red Storax.

Things by nature cool, which move the Terms, are,

The seeds of small Endive, of Me­lons, of Gourds, of Pompeons, Cu­cumbers and Lettice; of which Pessa­ries may be made, to use in the Womb; but have a care you put a string to them, to get them out again when you please.

A Syrup to take away the Obstructions in the Body, which hinder the Terms.

Take Madder, two ounces; of the roots of Lovage, Sperage, Cypers, and grasse, each an ounce and a half; Pen­ny Mountaine and Balm, of each two ounces, Spica Indiae, half a dram; Li­corice, Currans, Rosemary flowers, and Stecados, of each an ounce; six ounces of Honey, and nine ounces of Sugar; boyl it into a syrup, and take thereof two ounces at a time.

Another for the same.

Take two ounces of Madder, Sperage roots, Cypers roots, and the roots of Butchers broom, of each an ounce, Valerian Sabine, white water Mints, and Penny-royal, of each a handful; Baulm two handfuls; of Melon seed, one ounce; Licorice and Currans, each half an ounce; Honey and Sugar, of each six ounces; so make it into a syrup, and take thereof about an ounce and a half at a time.

To provoke the Terms strongly.

Take the water of Smallage, of Lu­pins, Sperage, and Fennel, of each six ounces; a dram of Cinamon, a quar­ter of an ounce of Spica Indiae; Am­moniacum and Oppopanacum, of each a dram and a half; Parsly seed, Fennel seed, wild yellow Rape seed, and Carraway, of each a quarter of an ounce; Gromell seed and Agrimony, of each a handful; Galingale and Saffron, of each half a dram, the ker­nels [Page 29]of Quinces and Mallow seeds, of each half an ounce; Syrup of Violers, two ounces; boyl them all, except the syrup in two quarts of Gourds water, till the third part be wasted; then strain it, and mix it with the syrup of Violets, and boil it with so much Ho­ney as you see convenient; then strew a little powder of Cinamon into it, and Vinegar of Squils, enough to make it sowrish; then take of it in quantity as the former.

Common Sirups whith remove obstructi­ons of the Terms, are,

Syrup of Mugwort, of Maiden-hair, of Chicory with Rubarb, and the syrup of the five roots; these you may have ready made at the Apothecaries.

A Laxative to open the Body, and purge superfluous humours.

Take Sene leaves, Penny-royal and Madder, of each a like quantity; boyl them in white Wine, take thereof about three ounces at a time fasting.

Another for the same.

Take Penny-royal, Nep, Southern­wood, Rue, Centory and Hysop, of each one handful; Savin and Fether­few, of each one handful and an half; Galingale, a dram: Cinamon and Madder, of each one handful; Mirrh, a quarter of an ounce; boyl them toge­ther in a quart of fair water till the third part be wasted, take thereof two or three ounces fasting at a time.

Another.

Take Sperage, Smallage, Fennel and Parsly roots, Carduus benedictus and Butchers broom, of each an ounce and a half; Annis, Fennel and Carraway seeds, of each a dram and a half; Mug­wort, Penny-royal, Mints, Horehound, Assarabacca, and Fetherfew, of each half a handful; seeth them altogether in two quarts of water till half be wa­sted; then strain it, and mix there­with the syrup of the five roots of Ca­lamint and Mugwort, of each a like [Page 31]quantity, and drink thereof in the morning and afternoon, about two ounces.

Another to move the Terms.

Take Mints, Balm, Penny-royal, Marjerom and Southernwood, of each an handful; Anni-seeds, Fennel and Carraway seeds, of each an ounce; Polipody, an ounce and an half; Ci­cory roots, an ounce; cut the roots and herbs very small, and boyl them all together in a quart of water till a third part be consumed; then strain it, and sweeten it with Sugar to your own likeing, and take thereof as you please.

A Syrup to provoke the Terms.

Take four handfuls of Cicory roots, take out the pith, and cut them small, and boyl them a good space in two quarts of White wine; strain it, and then boyl the decoction unto a syrup with Sugar, and take thereof about two spoonfuls, evening and morning.

A Trochis to move the Terms.

Take a dram and a half of Mirrh, two drams and an half of Lupines, Rue, water Mints, Comin, Madder, Elecampane roots, Sagapenum, Op­popanacum, of each a dram; make it into Trochis, with the juyce of Mug­wort and give half an ounce thereof in the decoction of Juniper berries, made with water.

Wines good to provoke the Terms.

Wine of Elecampane roots, of Mar­jerom gentle, of the herb Rennet, of Betony, of Gellow-flowers, and of Rosemary; these are very good if the Patients Body be fitting to drink Wine, otherwise discretion may di­rect you not to use it.

Confections good for this Disease are,

The Confection of Elecampane roots, the Confection of Eringo roots, Conserves of Pioney, and Mirrh roa­sted in an Apple.

Pills to move the Terms.

Take the Pill Alephargine, half a dram; Aloes, two scruples; Savin in powder, one scruple make in into Pills with the water of Mugwort, and take half thereof at once; these provoke the Terms, and are safe without any danger.

Others for the same.

Take-Pill Alephargine, half a dram; pill Cochiae, one scrupse, mix them into five Pills, and take them at once.

By the way, heed is to be taken that these Medicines are not to be ex­hibited at such time as the Flowers do use to come, or nature useth to send forth the menstrual purgations; for at that time they may draw and turn the humors from the womb, where nature would yent and purge it, to some other parts of the Body, to the impediting of nature, and dammage of the Body: but the whole Body being purged and cleansed, then 'tis a fit time to apply [Page 32] [...] [Page 33] [...] [Page 34]these Medicaments, which may take away the intemperatness, and remove the vices and obstructions of the Womb and Vessels; purifie the cras­sious and corrupted bloud, and extenu­ate the same out of the Vessels; and briefly provoke the Terms: To do which, you see the ways and means are manifold, partly simple, partly com­pound, partly internal, and partly ex­ternal, to be administred and exhibited sundry wayes, and for sundry reasons, as the cause and necessity shall re­quire, to which we further proceed.

Pills to procure the Terms.

Take Musk and Mirrh, of each four scruples, Sterhas, Madder, Penny-roy­al, Citron pills, long Pepper, Cassia wood, Cassia pills, Pioney seeds and Calmus, of each three quarters of an ounce; Spica Indiae, half a dram: make Pills thereof with the juyce of Mugwort; whereof take a dram at once.

Thus far of inward Medicines, to procure the Terms; there are also [Page 35]many outward Medicines to be used if need require, the first part whereof are Baths and Lotions, which are part­ly natural, as of the natural water of hot Baths; and partly artificial, which are prepared of congruent and fitting Medicaments.

A Bath or Lotion for the Terms.

Take of Camomile flowers, of Mugwort, Calamint, Dictamnus of Crete, Briony, Savin, of each one handful; of Anniseeds, Fennel seeds, yellow Carrot seeds, and Ameos, of each an ounce; mix them altogether and therewith make a Decoction in water.

The use of these Lotions and Baths, is twofold; First, to wash and Bathe the Thighs and lower parts of the Woman, with the water decocted; and secondly, for the woman to sit in a Bath up to her middle.

The second sort of external mede­cines are injections, or medecines to be injected into the Womb; and Pessaries, or Suppositories to be put [Page 36]into the Womb, and remain there a space. Suppositories are made of me­decines wrapt up in wooll or bom­bast, or some such like thing; and so put up into the Womb, and there a great while to be detained.

But alwaies remember that you tie a string thereunto, put about the Thigh, that it may again be taken out when you please.

A Pessary for the Terms.

Take the leaves, roots, and juyce of Mercury, and make thereof a Pessary, and apply it alone; it may also be mixed with other Medicaments.

Pessaries of odoriferous things, and Aromaticks are very good.

An Aromatick Pessary to draw down the Flowers.

Take of Gum Ladanum the best, two parts; of Belzoine and Mirrh, of each one part; of Musk, one part: mix the Aromaticks with oyl of white Lillies, a sufficient quantity, to make it into a fit form, and so put it up.

Pessaries more strong in operation, are such as are made of Coloquintida, Bri­ony, Scammony, and the like, an ex­ample whereof take following.

A Pessary to move the Terms.

Take of Ox gall, the juyce of Brio­ny, of each one ounce; Pulp of Golo­quintida, two drams; of Mirrh one dram; make this into a Pessary as be­fore is directed, and so apply it.

In the third place outward means to be used, are, fumes and suffumigati­ons, and they are best to be made of odoriferous Aromatick things, where­of take this example.

A Fumigation to procure the Terms.

Take Belzoinum, Storax, Calamint, Mirrh, Bdellium, of each a dram;These you may have at the A­potheca­ries. Gallia Muscata Mes: half a dram; Li­bethum, half a scruple; Storax liquid, or oyl of Spike perfumed, a sufficient quantity, to make it into Pills or Trochis.

This is to be put on a moderate [Page 38]fire, that the fume may ascend, and the Woman is to be so comodiously pla­ced, that she may receive the fume up into the Matrix, through a vessel or funnel fit for that purpose, which is to be made broad at that end next the fire, that it may receive all the smoke, and with a narrow neck like a funnel, to inject the fume into the Matrix.

But these Fumigations as Hippocra­tes teacheth,Hipp. 5. Apho. 28. use to cause the Headach. Therefore, the Woman ought to be well covered & fortified with clothes, that the vapours may be kept from ascending to the Head.

In the fourth place, amongst the ex­ternal Medicines, unguents and plai­sters are to be used, and applyed to the Abdomina or secret places.

Letting of blood is also to be used in the Foot, or else where, as need re­quires us.

An Oyl good to bring down the Flowers.

Take oyl of sweet Almonds; two ounces; of white Lillies, one ounce; [Page 39]Oyl of Anniseed, two drams; Mixe them, and therewith anoint &c. it is very effectual for infirmities in those parts.

A Plaister to apply, to move the Terms.

Take of Penny-royal, Calamint, Ditanny, Mugwort, of each one hand­ful; Cinamon, Cloves, Mirth, Balsom, of each a dam; meal of Pease, a pound; mixe them with White-wine upon the fire, and make thereof a plaister, and apply it to the pundenda.

An Ointment for the same.

Take Mussilage of Fleawort, and Linseed, of each an ounce; Butter Unsalted, two ounces; Hens grease, Ducks grease, Goose grease, Marrow of Calves bones, of each half an ounce; Ammoniacum, a quarter of an ounce; oyl of Sesanum, oyl of sweet Almonds, of each five drams; Wax sufficient to make it into a salve. With this Oint­ment, anoint the Body behind and be­fore, from the Navel downwards; but [Page 40]not before you have used all other in­ward means, and outward of Bathing, letting blood, Fumes, Pessaries, &c.

A Plaister for the same.

Take Confectio benedicta, half an ounce; Turbith, a quarter of an ounce; Nigella seed, three drams; clarified Honey, enough to make it into a Plai­ster.

This Plaister, is to be applyed over the Privities, as before is directed.

If you perceive the Courses begin to appear, then take this drink follow­ing.

Take Mugwort, Sene leaves and Penny-royal, of each half a handful; Cinamon, half an ounce; Mace, three drams; boil these altogether in three pints of good Wine, until the fourth part be wasted: boil it in a pot stopt close in boiling water, otherwise cal­led Balneo Mariae.

In the last place, is to be used fricti­ons, or often rubbing of the Thighs; and inferiour parts, to draw the hu­mour downwards, Ligatures or bin­ding [Page 41]the Thigh hard with a string, Cupping glasses to be applyed to the Hips and Thighs, and the inferiour parts, both with scarification and without.

Let the sick party beware of all slimy meat, and hard meat, and from all salt, cold binding things, as are hard of digestion: omit ha­tred, sorrow, and melancholinesse; and alwaies in these cases, begin with the mildest Medicines first: of which you have sufficient before directed. And thus far, for the suppression or stopping of the Terms, we proceed to the ex­traordinary Flux (an evil also incident to Women) and the remedies there­of.

Chap. IIII. Of the immoderate Flux of the Terms.

HAving hitherto fully declared the Symptomes Causes and Cure of that great Feminine infirmity the [Page 42]stopping or obstruction of the termes' we provide now in order to treat of the immoderate Flux, or overflowing of Womens courses, which often­times brings to the party afflicted there with many other infirmities, and great weakness, and sickness, pains in the back and stomack, losse of ap­petite, ill digestion, and many other diseases, as Dropsie, Consumption, and others.

This infirmity may, and often times is caused by some fall, blow, thrust, over-straining, too much exer­cise, over-heating the body, and there­by making the blood thin and flux­ible.

It is also caused by some unnatural, and untimely birth, breaking of a vein, or some bruisings in the womb, some vein there being broken, or through some weakness in the reten­tive faculty, and too much strength of the expulsive; too much moysture and slipperiness in the Matrix.

Many suppose the immoderate Flux of the termes, and the continual Issue of women to be one and the [Page 43]same disease; but they are besides the Cussion; for they are 2 several & distinct diseases, as Galen plainly teacheth, for in the superfluous Flux of the termes, blood only issueth, as it useth to ap­pear in the natural monthly purgati­ons; but only it flowes immoderately; but in the issue or Flux of Women, not only blood, but various excre­ments, sometimes watry, and of ano­ther substance, are evacuated.

The Termes or courses are said to flow immoderately, after a twofold manner.

  • First, when they flow excessive­ly, and beyond measure in a small time.
  • Secondly, When this evacuation continues many dayes beyond its na­tural course and time.

And to this purpose, writes Galen, when he saith, Men are wont to call that much rain, or a great rain, which continues a long time, though it fall but slowly, and leasurely; or else if it suddenly fall upon the earth in great showers.

If any one shall be so curious, [Page 44]as to ask what is the proper quantity and measure of the menstrual blood, which nature ought duly to evacuate, Hippocrates answers them, That in a sound Woman,Hip. 1. Lib. de morb. mulier. Pag. 313. and one perfect in health, the moderate monethly Pur­gations ought to be about 20. ounces, a very little more or lesse, if they ex­ceed very much that proportion, or are much lesse, then are the Courses dis­eased, and disaffected.

But the certain quantity of the monethly natural purgations, cannot so strictly be defined in all bodies, be­cause of the difference of the tempe­rature, the dyet, habit, constitution, age and strength of Womens bodies: it must necessarily be, that some must have them more copiously then o­thers; but this definition might be taken to be of a Woman in perfect health; but if the Flux of natural pur­gation be immoderate, the party must needs be much afflicted therewith, and thereby incur many other Dis­eases; of some whereof mention is al­ready made, and partly of the causes thereof.

But we desire to be a little more copious,Causes. in discovering the causes of this distemper, before we proceed to the method of the cure thereof.

The causes of this immoderate Flux,Gal. 3. de Sym. Causis Cap. 2.5. Aph. Com. 58. are distinctly and accurately handled by Galen, That

The Termes (as other Fluxes of blood) do flow immoderatly for three causes.

  • First, By reason of the faculty that recludeth the Vessel containing the blood; as in the Flux of blood at the nose.
  • The second, Because of the evil affection, and ill disposition of the blood.
  • And the third, By reason of some vitiousness, or detriment in the Ves­sels themselves.

The first cause is, by reason of the natural faculties which are foure. The faculty attractive, retentive, alterative, and the faculty expulsive.

All which faculties perform their operations,Gal. 1. de fac. Nat. according to their proper temperatures, as Galen largely teach­eth.

Therefore they are the cause of the menstrual Fluxes immoderation, when these fuculties do not properly, and duly exercise their functions and Offices.

As chiefly, If the retentive facul­ty be too weak, that it cannot retain the blood so much, and so long as it should, until its due time: this is a special cause of the superfluous Flux, which many times happens, by rea­son of some ill distemper in the womb or Vessels, either too much cold, or moysture, or both.

In like manner, it comes to passe, when the expulsive faculty too power­fully sends forth the blood, in such quantity, and at such times, when by the Lawes of nature it should not; and this also chiefly happens, by reason of some ill distempers, either in the Womb or Vessels, proceeding of too much heat, and dryness, or both.

Another cause of the immoderate Flux of the Termes, is the ill disposi­tion, or corruption of the blood, and that after a twofold manner.

The first, when the blood is so viti­ous [Page 47]that it corrodeth and corrupteth the Vessels wherein it is contained, which is done, when the blood is too thin, hot, or sharp, and that by reason the temperature, or ill dyer, is mixed with superfluity of Flegme, Choler, or Melancholy, which are of­fensive to nature, and do provoke her to expel them.

A second cause is superfluity of blood distempered,4 Me­thod. 2. so that the Vessels cannot contain it, but it breaks out, and forces a purgation, by reason of the abounding acrimonious humor thereof, as Galen also makes mention. Having now spoken of two causes of the immoderate Flux of the Termes, we proceed to the third, which is, be­cause of the viriousness of the Vessels, and that consisteth in the too much hardness, softness, or smallness there­of: And happens to come, in youth, in their first beginning; and to others afterwards, in progress of time. And this happens to come thus to passe. Too much softness of superfluity of moysture, hardness of too much dry­ness, and smallness of too much hun­ger, [Page 48]or want of sustenance.

If this superfluous Flux proceed of too much blood,Colour. then the colour of the Termes will be pale and whitish, if they come of Choler, then the Flowers will incline to a yellow Co­lour.

If Melancholy be the abounding humour, then are the Flowers of a blewish, black, or dark colour.

By which Colours you may judge of the abounding humour, and pro­vide a remedy accordingly, to stop the excessive Flux thereof; for which pur­pose we now come to prescribe many, both internal and external meanes.

First, Observe these Rules.

Beware of hot things. If the Body be grosse, and full of blood and hu­mours, that nature seems to expulse it this way, stop it not suddenly, unless there be danger of much weakness by it; but gently purge and prepare the body first.

If the Body be very full of blood, you may open the Basilica vein; and [Page 49]seek to reverse it that way, if it appear to come of Choler; or, if any other peccant humour abounds, purge that humour with proper moderate Me­dicines, mixing astringent and com­fortable things amongst it.

Let the Woman abstain from all hard labour, and all kind of slimey, thin, and waterish meat.

Vomits are good to stay the hu­mour, and turn their course, that they flow not downwards.

Inwardly may be given Sirrups, E­lectuaries, decoctions, Confections, and the like.

A Sirrup to stay the immoderate Flux of the Termes.

Take Sirrup of Endive, one ounce; Sirrup of Purslain, half an ounce; the decoction of Egrimony, and of Plantain 4 Ounces: mix them toge­ther, and make them into a Sirrup, and so take it as you please.

An Electuary for the same.

Take conserve of Roses 2 Ounces, [Page 50]of water Lillies, one ounce of Pearl prepared, and burnt Harts-horn, each half an ounce: Bole Armonick, Terra Lemnia each half a scruple: mix them together with syrrup of Plantain, a quantity sufficient to make it into an Electuary.

A Bolus for the same.

Take Conserce of Roses, half an ounce; Philonium, or Requies Ni­cholai, two Scruples: Mix them toge­ther, and make a Bolus thereof. This is not to be given, but when extremi­ty urges.

Avicenna amongst many other Me­dicaments of this nature, commendeth the use of Vinegar, which to some may seem strange, it being the vulgar opinion, that Vinegar is of a great opening quality.

Nevertheless, Galen agrees with Avicen, Gal. 1. de sim. med. cap. 18.19. who writeth of Vinegar, that it is of an astringent quality, and doth suppresse and stop fluxes of the blood.

Others contradict the same, not approving of it in this case, as hurtful [Page 51]to the Womb. And there being ma­ny other Medicines here readily pre­scribed, it may very well be let alone.

A Powder to stay the immoderate Flux of the Terms.

Take Species tria santali, Diarrhodon Abbatis, each a dram: Coriander, two scruples and a half: (Blood-stone wa­shed, one dram: Shepherds purse, two scruples: fine Bolus, half a dram: Roses, Corral, of each half a dram: Cinamon, a quarter of an ounce: make them all into a fine powder, and mix them with Sugar, as much as you please, and take it in broth, or strewed on meat,

Another Powder for the same.

Take fine Bolus, one dram: Terra sigillata, two scruples; Tormentil, half a dram; Shepherds purse; a scru­ple: Pearl prepared one dram; Spe­cies de gemmis frigidis one dram and a half: Pomgranates, half a scruple: Roses, Saunders, red Coral, of each a [Page 52]scruple: Sugar, three ounces. Mix them all together, and make them a fine powder, and give it as the other in broth or stewed meat.

An Electuary for the same.

Take Conserve of Roses, six oun­ces; Conserve of Burrage, Buglas, Balm, of each an ounce; Bolus pre­pared, a dram: Pearl prepared, a quarter of an ounce: of Rubies, Ja­cinths, Saphir, each a Scruple; Cina­mon, a dram; mix these together, and make an Electuary thereof.

Another Electuary to stay the Flowers.

Take Conserve of Roses, three ounces: Marmalade, two ounces and half: red Corral, a dram: Bolus pre­pared, half a dram: Blood-stone pre­pared, two drams; mix them all toge­ther with the syrup of Myrtles, and make an Electuary thereof, and take it as you please.

A Confection for the same.

Take Conserve of Roses three oun­ces; Marmalade, two ounces and a half; Conserves of Burrage, Buglas, each one ounce; Bolus prepared, a dram and a half: Pearl, two drams and a half: Tormentil, two scruples; red Saunders, one dram; mix them all together, and make a Confection thereof, with the Syrup of Myrtles.

The Confection of black Cherries, and preserved Barberries, are also very good for this use.

A tost of bread steeped in red Wine, and Nutmegs in powder, strewed thereon, is very good.

Another for the same.

Take Tormentil and Nutmegs, of each a like quantity, Plaintain seeds, half as much; beat them all to pow­der, and give it evening and morning, with stale beer.

Red Corral, taken every day before meales in Plantain water, is also very good to stay the Flux.

For the same.

Take burnt Harts-horn, and Nettle­seeds, of each a like quantity: and beat them to powder, and take thereof a dram at a time in Plantain water, and about a spoonful of the juyce of Yar­row.

Galingal chewed in the Mouth, is also good.

A Clyster to stay the immoderate Flux of the Terms.

Take Fetherfew, Balm, Rue, Scabi­ous, Rosemary flowers, Southern­wood, Comin, Bay-berries, Cassia wood, Cassia sistula, of each a dram and an half: Dill seed, Anniseed, each a handful and a half: shaven Ivory, two handfuls; boyl them altogether by a mild fire in two quarts of water, till half be consumed, and then strain it out, and take of this Decoction, 12. ounces: oyl of Sesanum; Rue and Pep­per, of each half an ounce; Indian Salt, one dram: Diacastore; Con­fection [Page 55]of Bay-berries and Benedicta [...] of each three drams; temper them all very well together, and administer it very warm.

Thus far of such Medecines as are to be given inwardly; we now pro­ceed to external or outward applica­tions, of which there are divers, but all ought to be of an astringent stop­ping quality: such are Pessaries, Un­guents, and Plaisters, &c.

A Pessary, to stop the excessive Course of the Terms.

Take Baulustes, bark of Pomgra­nates, Mirtles, each half a dram; mix them with a sufficient quantity of Ho­ney, and make thereof a Pessary, and put it up into the Matrix.

There are also more liquid Me­decines, which may very commodi­ously be injected with a fit Instru­ment like Clysters.

An Injection to stay the Flux of the Terms.

Take Baulustes, Pomgranate Pill, Tragant, of each a dram: Comfrey, four drams; make a decoction thereof, and mix it with four drams of the Juyce of Plantane, and make an In­jection thereof.

A Pessary for the same.

Take juyce of Plantane, juice of Sloes, and juyce of Pimpernel, and make a Pessary thereof with Cotton.

A Cataplasme for the same, or a Pultis, which you please to call it.

Take Wormwood, Knot-grasse, Nights-shade, of each a like quantity: pound them together, and strain out the juyce; then temper with it Rye­meal, a sufficient quantity, to make it into the thickness of a Pultis, and lay it all over the Belly from the Navel to the Matrix.

A precious salve to stay the immoderate Flux of Womens Courses.

Take Comin, Carraway, Rueseed, Ameos, Seseli and Gallia Moscata, of each a dram and a half: Rosin, three drams: oyl of Dill, two ounces: oyl Olive, one ounce: Lignum Aloes, Cloves, of each half a dram; melt the Rosin in the oyl, and temper the other things with it, being beaten small in­to fine powder, and incorporate them together, by stirring until it be­come a thick salve.

Herewith anoint the Hips and Reins, it is excellent to stop the su­perfluous flux of the Terms: It is also good against vomiting and perbrea­king, and to expel wind, being apply­ed to the Navel and Stomach.

Be sure to observe, whether the wo­man abound with heat or cold, and frame your Medicines accordingly; if cold be predominant, use such things as cause heat, and are good to stop blood; such are,

Frankincense, Mastick, Cipress nuts, Sandaraca, Laudanum, Mirrh, Storax, Annis, and the like.

If heat abound, such things are to be prepared as are cold and astringent, as cool and bind, and such is the na­ture of these following.

Camphire, the juyce of Sloes, burnt Ivory, Coriander, Dragons blood, Saunders, Blood-stone, fine Bolus, Hypocistis, the seeds of Kneeholm, or Butchers broom, call it which you will; these seeds and also the de­coction of the root, are very effectual; if you would know where to find the seeds, look into the inside of the red berries thereof, and there you shall be sure to find them; but not before you have found the hearb, for they grow together, and the Kneeholme hearb is a common companion almost with every holly bush.

These are also cooling and astrin­gent; Mirtle seeds, Galls, Pomgra­nates, flowers called Balaustes, the seeds of Plantane of Melons, Cucum­ber gourds, and of Pompeons and the roots of Pimpernel.

Some are glad to eat what they can get, yet ye must as near as ye can avoid what is hurtful.Let the manner of dier, be such as is nourishing and breedeth good juyce, and is easily digested, especially such as thicken the blood, and hinder the fluxibility thereof, as Birds, those espe­cially of the Mountains, are highly commended, if you can catch them.

Let their drink be astringent Wine, or, use to quench Steel in their drink, or boyl therein the seeds, leaves, and roots of Plantane. And thus much of the Flux of the Terms.

Chap. V. Of the Flux of the Womb, or the Whites in Women.

WEe have already declared, that the immoderate Flux of the monethly Courses, and the Flux of the Womb, or the white Menstrue,Gal. 6. loc. affe. ad finem. are two several Diseases, as Galen plain­ly teacheth.

We proceed now to speak of the Whites, or white Flux in women, called by the Physicians,Gal. lib. 3 de sym. caus. cap. 4. Menstrua al­ba & profluvium uteri, as Galen.

This Disease hath great affinity with the Gonorrhea, or the involunta­ry issue of natural seed, called the run­ning of the Reins.

And this Flux also proceeds from two Causes, either too much cold, or unatural heat; and the differences of this Issue are very many, as may ap­pear by the colour of the Excrements which flow or issue, which are some­times red, sometimes pale, sometimes yellow, sometimes black, sometimes white, and sometimes green, some­times thick, and sometimes watery; from Species may be gathered the qua­lity of the peccant humour, as for ex­ample; If the Flux be of a red colour, it declares, that the issue flowes from the blood, and is thereby caused; If it be pale or yellow, it denotes, black Choler is the cause thereof; if white, it proceeds from flegm; if it be thin and watery, superfluous humours do abound in the Body.

But above all things, be sure to know whether this Flux, be a Gonorrhea, that is an involuntary issue of the na­tural Sperm, which is the running of the Reins, the self same Disease being also incident to men, as well as wo­men, and proceedeth in both Sexes, from one and the same cause, and that women as well as men do labour un­der the same Symptom; But is general among women to call this disease the Whites; though it be a Gonorrhea, or the running of the Reins, under which infirmitie many do a long time labour to the great wasting and Consumption of their Bodies; the principal cause thereof proceeding either from immo­derate, excessive, or unlawful Venery.

It is generally agreed, that the law­ful and proper cause of the Whites, is too much superfluity of Excrements; but as touching the place and manner, where and how these Excrements are ingendered, Authors disagree.

Some say, the cause is a daily beget­ting of corrupt humours in the princi­pal parts.

Others, that it proceeds only from the Womb, and Spermatick Vessels.

Others, that it flows only from the Reins, the Womb being not at all af­flicted thereby.

But Galen plainly demonstrates,6. de locis affect. loc. 5. that the whole Body is affected with this Issue, although it purge through the Womb, and evacuate it self from the Reins; and that this Disease is most incident to flegmatick and weak women.

It remaineth before we come to speak of the method of the cure of this infirmity, that diligence be used (as we said before) to find out whether it proceed from a Gonorrhea, that is, a Running of the Reins, or Flux of hu­mane seed, or not: the knowledge whereof must be rather conjectural, then to be demonstrated from any certain sign, other then the Patients own relation.

But the flowing of the Seed, is more thick, and floweth in lesse quantity, and is not so corrupt, and of a whiter colour.

On the contrary, the other Excre­ments are more thin, do flow more abundantly, are more filthy and putri­fied, and are not alwayes of the same colour.

But to proceed to the manner of the Cure of this Disease: Respect in the first place is to be had to the purging and cleansing of the whole Body; and if the Disease be a Gonor­thea, and proceed of heat unlawfully, or however gotten; the Body must first be purged with Medicines appro­priate to the Reins, before you at­tempt in any wise to stop the same; for which, this following is very good.

An Electuary to purge the Reins.

Take Cassia newly extracted, one ounce; Rheubarb in powder, one dram: mix them together with syrup of white water Lillies, a sufficient quantity to make it into an Electuary; put this into a penny pot of White-wine, or a little posset drink, which comes first to hand; stir it well toge­ther, [Page 60] [...] [Page 61] [...] [Page 64]till it be all dissolved in the drink, and so take it in the morning fasting, and go about your business (if you have any thing to do) about two hours after, take some broth or posset drink.

This Medecine you may take twice or thrice, as you see occasion, resting alwaies a day between.

Afterwards, you may take every other day, a dram of Trochis de Carabe in Plantane water.

You may also give the Patient, every second or third day, a dram of the filings of Ivory in Plantane water; it is very good.

Sweating is also much commen­ded in this case, which may be thus done.

Take Barley water, three ounces; strong Wine, two ounces: give it the Patient very warm, and so let her sweat.

Afterwards, prepare a Clyster in this manner.

A Clyster for the Whites, through heat, or running of the Reyns.

Take Beets, Violet-leaves, and Night-shade, of each one handful, seeth them well together, and take 12 Ounces of the decoction, or boyled liquor; which you please to call it, and to it add, Sugar 1 Ounce and a half, Yolks of Eggs, Oyl of Water-Lillies, Oyl of Roses, of each 2 Ounces, Salt a dram and a half: give this Clyster in the afternoon, a little before meat.

A Confection for the same.

Take Comfrey-roots 3 Ounces, Pom­peon-seed, Water-Lillies, of each a dram, Juyce of Liquorice 2 scruples, Coral prepared, Bolus, Mirtle-seed, Roses of each 10 grains, Gun Tra­ganth half a dram, Syrup, the Com­phrey Roots; cleave and slice them small, and seeth them in Red Wine, until they be so tender, that you may beat them to grout or pap, then pill the Pompeon-seeds, and beat them [Page 64] [...] [Page 65] [...] [Page 66]together with the other things to fine Powder; then incorporate them with the pap or grout, made of Camphrey-Roots; and then put to them Sirrup of Citron Pills, and of Orenges, as much as you please, and then boyl them together to a Confection. And take every morning a spoonful there­of, before break-fast.

Conserves of Roses, and Marma­lade, are exceeding good for this pur­pose, either to be taken alone, or mixt together, with prepared Bolus, and take thereof a dram at a time.

An excellent Sirrup for the same.

Take the Seeds of Purslain, Lettice, and Water-Lillies, of each an Ounce, prepared Coriander, Water Lilly-Roots, Dandelion, Night-shade, of each half an Ounce, Camphire half a dram, Dates chopt small 2 Ounces, Rue-Seeds, Mountain Mints, parched Gomin, of each 1 dram. Steep the Dates 8 dayes in Vinegar, then seeth them together in 2 quarts of water, till half be wasted, strain it, and put to [Page 67]it 12 Ounces of the juyce of Quinces, Sugar 36 Ounces, and boyl them all together to a Sirrup, and so clarifie them.

Of this Sirrup, take 2 Ounces, with 3 Ounces of Plantain water, or Pur­slain-water: This is an excellent pro­ved Sirrup for this purpose.

Drinks and Waters good for this Disease.

Take Comphrey Roots, and boyl them in water, and drink thereof 3. of 4. Ounces at a time with Sugar.

Also water wherein the filings of Steel have been steeped, and then Myrtle-seeds boyled therein, is very good to drink for the same:

Simple waters good for this infir­mity, are the waters of Plantain, Sor­rel, Purslain, and Cithorie.

The decoction of Mallows, and the Roots of Hollyhockles, is also very good to drink for this Disease.

An Oyntment for the same, called, Unguentum sandalinum.

Take red Sanders 2 drams and a half, yellow Sanders 1 dram and a half, Roses 3 drams, Fine Bolus a quarter of an Ounce, burnt Ivory a dram, Camphire half a dram, white Wax an Ounce, Oyl of Roses 3 Oun­ces. Melt the Wax first amongst the Oyl, then temper the other things a­mongst them, and make them into an Oyntment.

This Oyntment is not only good to annoint the secret parts for this Disease, but also to cool the inflam­mations of the Kidnies, Liver, and Stomack, and all other parts, being annointed with it.

A Salve for the same Disease.

Take Oyl of Roses, Oyl of Mirtles, Mastick, of each half a dram, shaven Ivory a scruple, Camphire 2 grains, pound that which is to be powned, and with a little Wax, make them in­to [Page 69]a Salve; with this annoint the Reins and Kidnies, it is excellent good for the whites.

Another Confection, very good for the same.

Take ripe Black berries, or bramble berries, which you will call them, and boyl them unto a Confection, ei­ther with Honey or Sugar; and take there of every day as much as you please: this you may make, when the Black-berries be ripe, and keep it in a readiness by you all the year; it is al­so good for any soreness, or swelling in the throat, and for inflammations in the mouth.

A Powder also excellent for the same.

Take the young buds of the Black­berry Bush, and the Berries thereof dryed; pound them, and drink a dram thereof twice a day in red wine.

You may gather the green buds, when the branches first spring; and keep them dry by you, and gather the [Page 68] [...] [Page 69] [...] [Page 70]Berries too when they be ripe (if you be not afraid to prick your fingers) & keep them dry by you; and when you have occasion, beat them to powder, and take them in red Wine, as before is directed.

You that will not regard this Me­dicine, because it is too cheap, may let it alone for them that will; there be Medicines enough to be had, to fit your turns, if you think the vertue consists in their dearness; and I do not desire to hinder those that can furnish you with them; but those that will make use of this, will finde it worthy their acceptance.

But if in case this Disease issue from some cold cause, it will not be then amiss to use this Medicine follow­ing.

For the Whites.

Take the Seeds of Arch Angel, or dead Nettles in powder, about a dram at a time in red Wine.

Confected Aniseeds is also very good for this Disease, and not impro­perly [Page 71]may be given in either case, this following.

Another for the same, or Reds.

Take 4 spoonfuls of red Rose-wa­ter, a new-laid Egge, a peny worth of white Sugar Candy in powder, and a Nutmeg grated, incorporate all these, and beat them well together, and drink it last at night going to bed.

You may also if the Issue be sharp, so as to cause pain and soreness, use an Injection or Pessary.

A Pessary for the whites in Women.

Take some Whites of Eggs, and beat them well in red Rose-water, and make it into a Pessary, with some Cot­ten or linnen Cloaths wet in it, and so put it up into the Matrix, alwayes remembring to tie a string to it, to pull it out again, when you please.

If the Whites flow from the abun­dance of superfluous humours, it will not be unnecessary to endeavour to e­vacuate the same through the skin, by [Page 72]using often frictions or rubbing of the whole body; first gently, and then more hard, by which means the hu­mours may be purged through the skin.

And to use unctions is also very good, if necessity urge, of Oyl of Ca­momile, of sweet Almonds, or the like; so that of all sorts of reme­dies you have here your choyce, and therefore we shall proceed to another Chapter.

Chap. VI. Of the fits of the Mother, or suffo­cation, or drawing up of the Matrix.

MAny Women sorely labour un­der this Disease, it hath great af­finity with the Syncope passion, and the Disease called Epilepsia, or the Falling Sickness; and that because of the Sympathy, that is, between the heart and the brain, and the Matrix.

This happens to Women, through several causes.

Oftentimes when there is an ob­struction, or stoppage of the Termes, which do burthen the Brain and Ma­trix with bad humors.

Sometimes by reason of the reten­tion of their natural Seed, as in Wi­dows, and old Maids; for this reten­tion causeth wind to ascend, and ill vapors from the Matrix, to the Dia­phragma or Midrif, and there stop­peth the passage of the breath: it of­ten therefore troubleth such as have been used to have carnal Copulation, and afterwards are constrained to want it; and therefore, saith Galen, it doth most frequently trouble Wi­dows.

Likewise the overmuch retention of the Seed, causeth it to putrifie, and send up ill vapours to the head, cau­sing many troublesome accidents, as drousiness, dulness, giddiness, & pains in the head; sometimes madness it self, shortness of breath, and panting of the heart.

The Complexion alters into a san­dy colour, swarthy or yellow, pale, and sometimes redness of the face or eyes.

When they are thus taken with this evil distemper; they begin to gnash their teeth, and immediately lose their speech, by reason their breath is stopt; and sometimes it is so violent, that neither breath, nor pulse, nor life, can be discerned; but lie as if they were dead, which is the worst condi­tion of all; for the breath cannot be retained, but death will ensue; for breath is the life of the body, without which no Creature can live.

This accident also happens through some sudden fright, and some sorrow­ful newes or sad accident suddenly happening; or some sorrow or grief, whereby melancholy prevails, and o­vercomes the body.

It may likewise be caused, by rea­son of some strong and violent Cold, which may so draw the breath and pulse inwardly, that no feeling, or sense thereof outwardly appears; but [Page 75]this case is not so dangerous as the o­ther.

But to proceed to Remedies, when this Disease commeth suddenly, spee­dily cast cold water on her face, and give her cold water to drink.

Let another Woman dip her finger in some sweet smelling odoriferous Oyl, as Oyl of Lillies, of Cloves, or of sweet Almonds mixed together, and gently rub the neck of the womb and Matrix, and that will draw the Matrix downwards;

If it be a married Woman, her Husband may give her a present re­medy, which lest it offend the Maids pudoris gratia, I leave it in my Au­thours own Language.

Si maritus ungat penem suum cum o­leo gariophillorum admixto parum olei. Amygdal: dulc: ad Caliditatem pri­oris temperandum, & Cum uxore coeat; Matrix subito descendet, it is a speedy Remedy.

You must have a care to keep away all sweet and pleasant things from the Patients nose, and apply stinking things thereunto; and on the contra­ry, anoyne, foment, and fume the Ma­trix with sweet Aromatick things.

For the Matrix is drawn and at­tracted to sweet things, and naturally flies from stinking smells: therefore as in the ascention, or rising of the Mo­ther, you are to use stinking things to the nose, and sweet to the Womb; so contrariwise, in the falling down, or discention of the Mother, you are to apply sweet perfumes to the Nose, and stinking to the Matrix: to the end, the same may thereby be drawn up again into its due place.

For this Disease, it is good to hold to the Nose, Assa foetida, galbanum, old Woollen Clouts, or Shooes burnt, Hair, or Feathers, or such stinking things that may be gotten speedily.

And apply sweet odoriferous things to the Matrix beneath; for which pur­pose this Powder following is very good.

A Powder to be used in the nature of a Pessary, against the suffocation of the Matrix, or fits of the Mother.

Take red Storax, Lignum Aloes, Cloves, of each a dram, Musk, Am­ber of each half a dram: Make them altogether into a Powder, and then bind it up in a Cloth, in the form of a Pessary, and put it up into the Ma­trix.

Another for the same.

Take an Ounce of Oyl of Lillies, Musk, Saffron, of each 3 grains; bruise all well together, and make a Pessary thereof with Wooll, or Cotton, and put it up into the place.

A Fumigation for this Disease.

Take Gallia Moscata, Cassia wood, Cynamon, Time, of each a like quan­tity; mix these together, and make a perfume thereof, and let the smoke be [Page 78]received up into the Matrix, through a tumel for that purpose.

If the Patient be a Maid, a Hus­band is the best Medicine, if she can get one; but in case that cannot be, then let her abstain from strong Wines, and flesh meat, and all such things as increase natural sperme.

And use letting blood, such meats and drinks as are cooling; and a­mongst the rest, this Confection fol­lowing is very good.

A Confection against the fits of the Mother.

Take Polipody Roots 6 Ounces, Sene, Violets, Prunes, Sebastins, Dates, Currans, of each an Ounce and a half, seeth these altogether in two quarts of water, till half be consumed away, then strain it out hard, and infuse in the decoction, while it is hot, 6. Oun­ces of the Seeds of Fleawort, till the Muscilage be drawn out of them, then put to this decoction 24 Ounces of fine Sugar, and take thereof, once in 2 or 3 dayes, and fast after it 6 hours.

Take silver Mountain, Madder Pe­nyroyal, the innermost rinds of Cassia Pipes, Pomegranat Kernels, Piony Roots, Calamy, of each 3 drams, Mul­cus and Spica Indie, of each, half a dram: make all these together into Pills, with the juyce of Mugwort; of these she may take a dram every day before Supper, if she take not the Con­fection the same day.

It is also good for this Disease, to o­pen the Saphea vein in the foot, and afterwards give the Patient a dtam of the Powder of Betony, in Featherfew-water. It is also good to anoint the Belly with the Oyl of Mastick: and so much for this affliction of the suffoca­tion, or ascention of the Matrix; we come next to speak of the discention, or falling down of the same.

Chap. VII. Of the falling down of the Womb.

This is another great evil, where­with many poor Women labour, and [Page 80]is of no small consequence and dan­ger; for as in some cases, and for some causes, the Matrix in some Women is drawn up and ascendeth out of its due place; so on the contrary, it some­times descends downwards, out of the Body.

This accident is caused sometimes by hard labour, and heavy births falls, bruises, too much astringency in the body, taking great cold, violent snee­sing, overmuch stirring, and the like.

It may likewise be caused by rea­son of ill humours, predominant in the Body, which fall down to the Womb, forcing it out of its natural place; and many times brings with it the Palsie and Falling Sickness: as al­so Ulcers and Imposthumes in the Womb.

If this Disease happen by means of any outward accident, the Patient her self can best discover the cause there­of.

If it come from some inward cause, then respect is to be had to the Con­stitution of the party, whether she be lean or fat, moystor dry, and to the [Page 81]Symptomes the disease, which causeth pain in the lower part of the Back­bone, and also about the secret parts; sometimes an Ague with it, the Urine staies, and the Body is astringent.

If the passage of the neck of the Womb bee smooth and open, then it is not moved downwards; but if it be stopped, then be sure it is descen­ded, although it appear not out of the Body; and if it do continue displaced any long time, it will be very difficult, if not impossible to reduce the same to its natural place again.

Now to seek Remedies for this Di­sease, you must, instead of applying sweet things to the Matrix, as you were directted in the ascension of the Matrix, or the fits of the Mother, to draw it down, you must now apply stinking things to the Matrix, and sweet smells to the Nose, to draw it up againe.

A Fume for the falling down of the womb.

Take Tormentil, Bistort, juyce of Sloes, [Page 82]of each 3 drams: Pomgranate pills, the blossoms thereof, of each a quar­ter of an ounce; Assa foetida, an ounce; Mastick, Frankincense, Galbanum, of each 2 drams and a half: Cypress Nuts, Galls, Mirtle seed, of each five drams: stamp & mix all these together, & strew thereof upon a red hot brick, & let the patient receive the fume thereof be­neath.

Let it not come at her Nose, but in the mean time, let her smell to Musk, Amber, Violets, and such sweet smells which draw up the Mother, and cause it to ascend again.

Another for the same.

Take a stinking rotten addle Egg, that a Hen hath sat on, and dip Cot­ton in it, and lay it upon the neck of the Matrix, it causeth it to ascend again.

A Fume for the same by a De­coction.

Take Camomile, Marjoram, Carra­way, of each one handful; Linseed, [Page 83]one handful and a half: boyl these al­together in water, and receive the Fume thereof into the Matrix.

The vapour of Housleek bruised and laid on a hot brick, is good for the same, if there be heat, or inflamma­tion in the Matrix.

A Fomentation for the same.

Take Roses, three ounces: Mirtle seed, Violet leaves, Marigolds, Fether­few, of each one handful: Assa feetida, five drachms: bruise them together, and tie them up in a bag, and seeth them in red Wine, and lay it upon the place after the vapour is received.

An Oyntment for the falling down of the VVomb.

Take the Ointment of Hollyhocks, which is called at the Apothecaries unguent de Althea: mix therewith some marrow of an Ox, or other beast, the grease of a Hen or Capon, and some oyl, and herewith annoint the neck of the Matrix, and all the [Page 84]parts about it, when you go to bed; you may also make a plaister hereof, and apply it all night as before.

Another Ointment for the same.

Take oyl of Myrtles, of Lillies, of Mastick, of each two ounces and an half; Assa foetida, Bistorta, Tormen­til, of each three drams; melt the Gums, and then pound them altoge­ther, and make an ointment thereof; and with this annoint the Kidnies, and lower parts of the Body.

A Pessary for the same.

Take Assa foetida, one ounce: Ma­stick, Frankinsense, Myrtle seed, Ga­lingale, Cypress nuts, of each a dram; beat them together very small, and mix it with the oyl of Mirtles, and make a Pessary thereof, and put it up into the Matrix.

A Plaister for the descension of the Ma­trix, to keep it from going any further out of the Body.

Take Rozen, two ounces: Frankin­cense, Mastick, Cypres gum, of each half an ounce: mix and melt them all together, and put to it some oyl of Mastick, so make it into a Plaister, and apply it to the privities, and wear it thereon.

Another Plaister for the same.

Take Mastick, one ounce; Fran­kincense, half a dram; Cypress nuts, Galls, Mirtle seeds, of each one dram; Pomgranate pills, the blossoms there­of, Turpentine, of each one quarter of an ounce: pound all that is to be pounded, and mix them all together, with turpentine and oyl of Mastick, enough to make it into a plaister, and spread it on a cloth, to cover from the Navel to the privities, and there wear it alwaies.

For the descention of the Matrix, it is also good to take Date stones, and beat them to powder, and strew there­of on the place.

A Bath for the falling down of the Matrix.

Take Oken buds, Medlar leaves, Service leaves, Cypress leaves, topps of Ladies thistles, each one handfull: Sprigs of Mirtle, Valerian, wild Mints, of each two handfuls; bruise or chop them all small; then put them in a bag, and boyl it well in water and fit thereon, in a Bath up to the Navel a­bout an hour.

For pain in the Matrix, through wind.

Take Turbith, four scruples: Gin­ger, one scruple: give it in Mug­wort water, or in the Decoction of Mugwort.

For the same, and to prevent Mis­carriages.

Take Carraway seed, one dram: Ameos, Ginger, Beaver cod, of each one scruple: steep the Carraway seed in Vinegar, and dry it again, and beat it to powder; then mix it with the rest, and give a dram thereof in Wine, every morning for certain dayes toge­ther.

For the same.

Annoint the Belly with oyl of Lil­lies, and oyl of Wall flowers.

For an Impostume in the Maetrix, a Pessary.

Take Wax, oyl of Violets, of each half an ounce: melt them together, and then put to it juyce of Plantane, Nightshade, of each an ounce: Cam­phire, half a dram: mix them all well together, and dip a tent of Cotton in it, and put it up into the Matrix.

An Injection to cleanse the Matrix.

Take Galls, Lentils, Pomgranate flowers, Kneeholm seeds, Roses, Saun­ders, of each a like quantity: boyl them all together in water, and strain it, and inject the decoction into the Matrix with a Syringe.

For the same.

Take Hysop, Wormwood, and Ho­ney of Roses, and seeth the same in white Wine and milk, and inject the decoction thereof.

A Bath to incarnate the flesh in the Matrix, after it is clean sed from all uncleannesse.

Take Centory, six ounces; Ireos, Comphrey, Cassia roots, Egrimony, of each three handfuls: Sarcocolla, Gum dragon, Dragons blood, Mum­my Hypocistis, Frankincense, of each one dram: boyl them all together in a sufficient quantity of water, till half [Page 89]be consumed,; and then, put to it re­fuse of Iron prepared, an ounce and a quartet: then boil it a little longer, and use this for a Bath.

Another for the same use.

Take Mallows, Violet leaves, Meli­lot, Plantaine, Lentils, Fenegreeke, Colewort buds, of each three hand­fulls: boyl them all in water unto the half, and make a Bath of it, as of the former.

A Pessary, to mollifie the hardness and pain between the Navel and the Matrix.

Take Ducks grease, marrow of Harts bones, or Oxes, marrow if you cannot get the other, Neats feet oyl, Bdeli­um, yolks of rosted Eggs, of each a like quantity; Saffron, two drams: dissolve them together in Wine, and temper therewith oyl of Lillies; then dip a tent of linnen or Cotton therein, and put it up into the place; use it often, this will asswage the pain, and take it away.

For Cankers, and Ulcers of the Womb, a purging Potion.

Take Benedicta laxativa, half an ounce; Agarins one scruple: Ginger, Grains, one scruple; juyce of Fetherfew, two ounces and a half: mix them well together, and give it the Patient two mornings together, and then let let her govern her self, as after purging.

Another Potion for the same, to be used many dayes together to cleanse the Matrix.

Take Oxymel of Squils, half an ounce: Syrupus de Bysantijs, Syrup of Vinegar, of each three quarters of an ounce; Lovage water, Egremony wa­rer, of each an ounce: Cicory water, 2 ounces; Let the Patient drink this in the morning early, and sleep upon it, & fast four hours after it; use it many daies together, till the Urine become of a good colour, and appear clean.

A Pessary for Ulcers in the Womb.

Take oyl of Fetherfew flowers, Saf­fron, of each half an ounce: oyl of Wall-flowers, two ounces: Sarcolla, Mittha, Opopanacum, of each a dram; Turpentine, three quarters of an ounce; Musk, one graine; White wax, one ounce: boyl them all toge­ther in four ounces of the juyce of Smallage, till all the juyce be consu­med; then annoint a Pessary of Cot­ton therewith, and put it up into the grieved place, and refresh it often­times.

Cleanse the Body inwardly with Honey water, and make afterwards this Pessary following, renewing it four or five times a day.

Take Smallage, Fetherfew, Mug­wort: stamp them together, and make a Pessary thereof, and annoint it with Hierapicra.

Take also the juyce of the aforesaid herbs, and wet a cloth therewith, and lay it on the Back and Hips, and low­er parts of the Back bones.

An Injection for Ulcers in the Womb.

Take Egrimony, and seeth it in Bar­ley water: and mix with it clarified Honey, or Honey of Roses, and so use it.

Another more strong for the same.

Take Wine, six ounces: burnt Al­lum, Verdigrease, of each half a dram; temper them together, and let them stand infused in the Wine five hours, and then inject it.

Another to dry the Ulcers.

Take Galls, Pomgranate pills, Pom­granate flowers, Allom, Egrimony, of each a like quantity: seeth them all together, and strain out the decoction, and inject it.

For a Vein broken in the Ulcer.

If there be any Vein broken in the Ulcer, then mix some of these things [Page 93]with the former decoction, as Dragon blood, Mirrh, Frankincense, fine Bo­lus, Saffron, Hartwort, Rose water or Plantane water.

A Bath for the Reins, very good for Ul­cers or Cankers therein.

Take Yarrow roots, Valerian roots, Smallage roots, of each four handfuls; Mirrh, Oppopannacum, of each one quarter of an ounce: boyl them alto­gether in a sufficient quantity of fair water until a good part thereof be consumed, then let the Patient sit therein up to the Navel.

Let the Patient in this Disease, use such meats and drinks as cleanse the Body, and make good blood, beware of fish, and such moist meats, and abstain from much motion of the Body.

Chap. VIII. Of natural Conceptions.

HAving thus far treated of the di­seases, accidents and infirmities incident to the Menstrue, and genera­tive parts of Women; we proceed to discourse of those things which per­tain to the Conception and Birth of man; in which thing the conservation and continuance of all mankind con­sists.

That to the generation of every man there is a necessity of a distinction of both sexes Male and Female; and al­so of Conjunction of them both, we have already declared.

But in what manner this admirable operation of nature is effected, and brought to perfection, Galen declareth; who saith,Gal. 1. sem. 4. That in time of Copulation of the Male and Female, the Seed of the Male, is attracted into the Womb of the Female, and is extended, and dilated through all the parts thereof; and is there, by the natural heat, and [Page 95]moisture of the Womb, Coagulated into a massy substance, before any of the Members be formed, and after­wards nature, as with an instrument forms and fashions the Veins, Arte­ries, Bones and other Members bran­ching them all over the body, & then safely wrappeth them all up together in a Coat, preserving them to the time of the perfect Birth, if no mischance, or accident intervene to the hinderance thereof; which must be diligently en­deavoured to prevent. And to further the Conception for the procreation sake of mankind, take these directions.

A Confection, to cause fruitfulnesse in Man or Woman.

Take Rapes, Ivory shaven, Ashkeys, Sesely, Behen red and white, of each one dram; Cinamon, Doronicum, Mace Cloves; Galingale, long Pepper, Rosemary flowers, Balsom wood, Blatiis Byzantiae Marjoram gentle, Penny-royal, of each two scruples; Balm, Buglas, Citron pieces, of each one scruple, Spica Indiae, Amber, Pearles, of each half scruple; Sugar a [Page 96]pound: decoct the Sugar in Malmsey, and the other things; and make them into a Confection, use of it a little at a time.

A Powder for the same, to be strewed on meat.

Take Nurmegs, Cubebbes, Ginger, of each half a dram; long Pepper, Mastick, Cinamon, red Behen; white Behen, of each a Scruple: mix them all together, and make them into fine powder, and strew of it a little upon the parties meat.

Another Confection for the same.

Take Honey; three ounces: Linseed, Grains, Ivory shaven, of each one ounce: Borrage three ounces; Sugar, 24 ounces: Musk, Amber, of each half a scruple: Cinamon, two grains: Cloves, Mace, of each one graine; clarifie the Honey, then incorporate the other things with it, to make a Confection thereof, and take of it as you please.

A Porionto further Conception in a Woman.

Take Wormwood, Mugwort, of each a handful. Boyl them together in a quart of Goats milk, till almost half be wasted, and let the Woman drink thereof first and last, every morning and evening a good draught.

A Bath for the same.

Take Penyroyal, Mugwort, Rue, of each a handful: Put them into a Bag, and boyl them in Rain-water, a suffi­cient quantity to make a Bath, boyl it well, & bathe therein twice a day, and renew the Bath every third day, use this for a good space.

You must understand, as I said be­fore that without the mutual con­juction of male and female, the natural reception and coagulation of both their Seeds in the Field of gene­ration the Womb, there can be no natural conception, and so conse­quently no birth; so that if the impe­diment [Page 98]lie in either of the Vessels re­ceiving, or instruments giving, then these Medicines prescribed, do not work their effect till the obstructive causes be removed, and of them you shall be sufficiently directed, in the subsequent Chapter of barrenness, and the causes thereof; but if the Womb be clean, and the Masculine Instru­ment proportioned thereunto, so that the defect lie in some debility of nature, let both parties make use of this Confection following; and take of it in the mornings fasting, and they shall seldom fail of their desires.

But take notice by the way, I do not prescribe this to Maids, nor Batche­lors, they have no use for it.

A Confection to further fruitfulness in Men, and Conception in Women.

Take a Bores Stones, Stags Pissel sha­ven small, I ounce, (Bulls Pissel, if you cannot get the other, will do as well) Sparrows Brains, 50. or 60. yellow Rape, Eringo Root, and Satyrion con­fected, [Page 99]Ivory shaven, of each 3 Oun­ces and a half; Cynamon, Dates, In­dy, Nut Kernels, of each 2 Ounces; Long Pepper, Ginger, Rosemary Flow­ers, of each half an Ounce; Seseli 1 dram, Nettle-seed, Cloves, Safron, Mace, Galingale, Cypress Roots, Nut­megs, Cassia wood, Cucubes, Doro­nicum, Field Mints, Peny Royal, Spi­ca Indiae, Musk, Amber of each one dram. Make all these into a Confecti­on, with 4 pounds & an half of white Sugar, refined in Mint-water, and take of it as before is directed; and if you cannot easily get all the things, yet re­fuse not the Medicine, but make it with as many as you can come by.

Chap. IX. Of Barrenness.

IT is granted amongst all men, that the Generation of man-kind, and also of all other Creatures, is the [Page 100]most perfect work, and the most ex­cellent and most exquisite natural o­peration of all the works of nature;Aristotle 2 Gen. A [...]mal. Galen de [...]s [...] part. 14.2. which Aristotle most elegantly sets forth, and demonstrates, That where­as it is impossible by the decree of na­ture, that any animal or Creature should live alwayes, or have an eter­nal Essence and being: therefore for the continuance of the kinds of all Creatures, as well bruit as rational, that a continual Generation might be had, and maintained, the Sexes of male and female, fitted to the act of procreation, were ordained.

And from hence, saith Galen, it comes to passe, that all Creatures are furnished with Instruments of genera­tion, fitting the quality of their Sexe, and are indued with natural instincts, prompting them to the use thereof.

Therefore we here take liberty, to speak of this wonderful Operation of nature. And to seek out the causes that hinder, and prescribe meanes to fur­ther the Operation of the same; part­ly for Dame Natures sake, whose in­tent in hindred, where this work is [Page 101]obstructed, and partly for those Ladies sakes, who are sometimes disconso­late, being amongst the number of those that are accounted barren.

We intend not here to enter into the Philosophers Inquisitions, nor the Physitians Lectures; what is the for­ming matter which causes the birth in the Womb; in what order, how, and in what time, or how many dayes the several parts and members of the bo­dy are framed; at what time God the Authour of all things, and nature it self infuseth the living soul into the Conception, or conceived body; but our intention only is to speak of what belongs to Physick, and not only to Philosophy; & to treat of those things which do impedite, or hinder the perfection of conception.

For as the conception hath some contingency with every part of the body, so the same may be taken quite away, hindred or impedited, or de­praved, as it happens in all other acti­ons and motions of the body.

If Conception be quite taken away in a Woman, so that she can never [Page 102]conceive, this affection is called bar­renness; or this may be called a bar­ren Woman, which you please.

But if a Woman do conceive some­times, though rarely and seldom, this is a weak and diminutive conception, or the conceiving faculty is feeble, and diminutive.

And to this kind of debility and weakness, may be referred abortive, and untimely Births; when the Wo­man doth conceive, but through weak­ness cannot bring the conception to the due time of the birth.

There is also a depraved concepti­on, when in the Womans Womb is contained some unnatural concepti­on, as Monsters, Mola, or superfluous unshapen flesh, water, wind, or the like, filling up the Womb, and re­ceiving the form of a conceived sub­stance: the causes and Remedies of these, we shall proceed to declare.

The holy Scripture makes mention what reproach, and how odious and detestable a thing barrenness was ac­counted in the antient times: there was hardly any greater defamation to [Page 103]a woman, so that Rachel could cry out to her Husband for Children, or else her life lay on it, rather then bear the reproach of barrenness; and some Women have preferred their Maids to their Husbands, so that the Child might be reputed theirs, to take away their blemish of barrenness; but you will find few Women of that mind now a dayes.

Therefore we come to speak of the causes of this grief, which the Physi­tians do account many and divers.

Hippocrates accounteth the principal causes of barrenness to be these,Hippoc. lib. de sterili­tate. if the mouth of the Womb be disterred, and turned aside out of its place, con­trary from the pudenda if the mouth of the Womb appear too big, or more wide then is convenient; or if the mouth of the Womb be fallen down, or hang out below the pudenda; then is such a Woman unfit for concepti­on; these are therefore great causes of barrenness.

Many other are the causes of bar­renness, sometimes more, sometimes lesse, as Galen excellently teacheth.

The head and principal beginning of the invention,Gal. 3. de Symp. Caus. and finding out of all causes, which bring hurt, or are ob­noxious to the faculties of the body, is no other but the knowledge of the meanes; whereby these faculties per­form their actions in the time of health and soundness of body.

And whereas it hath been already declared, that to produce any natural conception, there is a necessity of con­junction, and carnal copulation, both of the man and woman: therefore it ought, first, to be made manifest, that the cause of barrenness, may be through some defect in the man, or in the woman, and sometimes in both.

Although at this time our intent is only to treat of such Diseases, as are incident to Women: yet neverthe­less, since the Women have in this case a great interest, and a dammage too if the fault be in the man; be­cause they may help their Husbands defect, and in so doing, pleasure them­selves, if they finde the imperfection to lie in him, we shall not praetermit it.

And again, since there is a necessi­ty of the Copulation of man and wo­man, or else there can be no generati­on: and that they be both furnished with fit Instruments for that purpose, as the man with the yard, stones, and seed; the woman with Pudenda, testes, You may easily know what I mean. the womb, seed, and menstruous blood.

Then all reason tells you, that if there be any disaffection, or defect in nature, in any of these members or parts, belonging to this work, the fruitfulness and conception must ne­cessarily be, either impedited, dimi­nished, or quite taken away.

Barren­ness in men. Few Wo­men do complain of this fault.One cause of barrenness on the mans part, which is of all Authours condemned, is, penis longus, or the o­vermuch length of the yard; by rea­son whereof, the seed is refrigerated, and taketh cold in the passage of the yard, before it can be injected from the stones, into the womb.

But although this be a general re­ceived reason,Avicen. lib. 3. tract. 1.8. amongst almost all Philosophers, yet it may seem vain, and suffer contradiction; for the seed passing through the Conduit, or chan­nel of the yard, is cherished, and kept hot, by the pudenda of the woman, so that it seems impossible, that it should take cold in the passage; but rather the contrary, that the long penis is most fit and commodious, to further and perfect the Conception, by in­jecting the seed into the inner parts of the womb, which is done without any interval, or space of time.

And also contradictive to this O­pinion, is the relation of Averroes, which is credited by Aristotle, and o­ther good Philosophers, That a cer­tain Maid conceived with Child, by standing in a Bath, where some seed of man had been cast, the Womb drawing the same into it, by its natu­ral magnetick attractive faculty, which draweth and attracteth to it self the seed of man, as the Loadstone draweth Iron.

But whereas many will have it, that [Page 107]the too long yard is unfit for concep­tion;This is the worst fault in womens account. so there are others on the con­trary, that affirm the short penis to render men unfruitful, and that to be as bad, if not a greater fault then the other.

And this is the more probable rea­son, that the short penis may be more defective then the long one, because it cannot so well inject the seed into the inner parts of the womb.

But to speak freely, neither of these causes, either of the length or short­ness of the yard, can be firm reasons of the barrenness, or fruitfulness of man, or to cause barrenness in the man, since it is confirmed by experi­ence of both parts, that have had plen­ty of Children.

But a greater reason of barrenness in the man, may be some vitiousness, or defect in the yard, as if the same be oblique or crooked, if any of the liga­ments thereof be distorred, or broken, whereby the wayes and passages, through which the seed should flow, be corrupt, stopped, or vitiated; or some Disease or imperfection, be ei­ther [Page 108]in the proper, or in the vicious parts thereof.

Another cause of barrenness, by the defect of the yard, is too much weak­ness and tenderness thereof, so that it is not strongly enough erected, to in­ject the seed into the womb; for the strength and stifness of the yard, very much conduces to conception, by rea­son of the forcible injection of the hu­mane seed into the womb.

A second cause of barrenness of men, may be some natural vice, or lae­sion in the stones;Gal. 14. usu part. 1. de sem. 11, 16. if they are so made by nature, that they cannot exercise their gift properly, in producing seed.

The stones may be the cause of barrenness, by reason of their evil composition, or accidents and distem­pers, or continual solution.

The stones may labour under di­stempers, either simple or com­pound, either with, or without mat­ter.

As if the stones be oppressed with any inflammation or tumour, wound [Page 109]or Ulcer, or drawn up within the bel­ly, not appearing outwardly, all such causes of the stones, may be the rea­son of barrenness in the man.

Also the man may be barren, by reason of the defect of the seed, and that may come from a twofold cause.

  • The first, If he ingender and cast forth no seed at all, or in lesse sub­stance then is needful.
  • And secondly, If the seed genera­ted, and cast forth, be vitious, and un­fit for generation.

The seed is hindred from generati­on in those bodies, which are grosse and fat, the matter of it being de­fective.

And on the other side too much leaness, or a continual wasting or con­sumption of the body, destroyes the seed; nature turning all the matter and substance thereof, into nutriment for the body.

The seed may also be corrupt, and vitious, by reason of many internal, and external causes.

If the Instruments and Vessels of [Page 110]seed be intemperate, or disaffected, or in any wayes corrupted, that they can­not attract the matter of the fruitful seed, and so that they cannot concoct the attracted matter, and retain the same so long, until it can receive its whole and perfect absolution; as for examples sake, it frequently happens to those, who have a long time laboured with the Gonorrhea, or running of the Reins; or if the principal parts of the body be so ill affected, that they con­ceit ill nutriment, that causeth viti­ous seed to be generated, unfit for con­ception.

Likewise many outward causes may so alter, and disaffect our bodies, as that they may cause the seed to be vi­tious, and unfruitful.

Too frequent carnal Copulation,Gal. 1. de sem. Cap. 16. is one great cause of barrenness of men, which attracteth the seminal moi­sture from the stones, before it is suffi­ciently prepared, and concocted, as all other members of the body, by the institution of nature, do use to draw their accustomed juyce to them­selves.

So if any one by daily Copulation, do exhaust and draw out all the moy­sture of his seed, then do the stones draw the moyst humours from the su­perior veins, unto themselves; and so having but a little blood in them, they are forced of necessity, to cast it out raw, and unconcocted; and thus the stones be violently deprived of the moysture of their veins, attract the same from the other superior veins, and the superior veins, from all the o­ther parts of the body, for their pro­per nutriment, to the great violating of the body, depriving the same of the vital spirits.

It is therefore no wonder, if those that use immoderate Copulation, are very weak in their bodies, seeing the whole body is thereby deprived of its best & purest blood, & of the vital spi­rits: insomuch, that many who have bin too much addicted to the pleasure, have killed themselves in the act.

But chiefly, It is no wonder, if such seed not well concocted and di­gested, be unfit for generation.

Gluttony and drunkenness, do also much hinder men from fruitfulness, and maketh them unfit for generati­on.

But amongst other causes of bar­renness in men, this also is one that maketh them barren, and of the na­ture of Eunuchs, the incision, or cut­ting of their veins behinde their ears, which for a Disease many times is done.

This saith Hippocrates, causeth barrenness in them,Gal. Lib. de geni­tur. whose veins be­hinde their eares are cut, to which Galen agrees; for he saith, that espe­cially more then from any other parts of the body, the seed flowes from the brain by those veins behinde the eares, which also Aristotle con­firms.

From whence it probably appears, that the transmission of the seed is im­pedited by the Section of the Veins behinde the eares, so that it cannot at all descend to the lower parts of the body, or else very crude and raw.

And thus have we shown the causes of barrennesse in men. Now we come to speak of barrennesse in women.

Although there are many causes of the barrenness of women; yet the chief and principal are internal, and they may be all referred to the privy parts of the Body, the Seed, or the menstruous blood.

Therefore Hippocrates speaking of the easy and difficult Conception of Women, saith thus; The first conside­ration is to be had of their Species; for little Women are more apt to conceive then great; slender, then grosse; white and fair, then ruddy and high coloured; black, then pale and wan.

Those which have their Veins con­spicuous, are more apt then others; but to be very fleshy is evil, to have great swelling Breasts good.

The next thing to be considered is, their Courses or monethly purgations, whether they have them duty every Moneth, if they flow plentifully and are of a good colour; whether they [Page 114]have them equal every moneth, at their certain daies and times; for so their purgations ought to be.

Then the Womb, or place of Con­ception is to be considered, it ought to be clean and sound, dry and soft, the Womb not retracted nor drawn up, nor prone or descended down­wards, and the mouth thereof ought not to be turned awry, nor everst, nor too close shut.

But to come to consider of these Causes more distinctly, and particu­larly.

The first parts therefore to be spoken of, are the pudenda, that is, the privie member, and the Womb, which parts are shut & enclosed, either by nature, or against nature; & from hence such women are called inperforate; For in some Women the mouth of their Womb continueth compressed & clo­sed up, from the time of their Birth, until the time of the ripeness of their Courses; and then on a sudden when their Terms provoke forwards to pur­gation, they are molested with great pain and sickness: some break, of their [Page 115]own accord, others are dissected and opened by Physitians, to some it brings death, or else they are forced to break, or never break at all.

And this Aetius distinctly handles, who writeth, that the Wombs of wo­men are shut three manner of waies, which hinders Conception.

The first is, When the lips of the Pudenda do grow or cleave toge­ther.

Secondly, Although the lips seem open, yet there are certain Membrances growing in the middle part of the Ma­trix within.

The third, Though the lips and bosome of the Pudenda may appear fair and open, yet the Mouth of the Womb may be quite shut up; all which three kinds of Closures are im­pediments to the Conceptions of wo­men.

They do hinder in the first place, the performance of three offices; the use of man, their purgations, and their Conception.

In the second place, they are two impediments, the communication [Page 116]with men, and Conception there­by.

And thirdly, two other impedi­ments to themselves, Purgation and Conception, there might also fall in by the way, a discourse of the Hymen, or that Membrane which is so called; but that only serves for the testimony of true virginity to them that know it, which lock the losse of a Maidenhead opens: but that seems a digression from this intention.

But amongst all causes of barrenness in a Woman, in the instruments of generation, it is certain, that the grea­test is in the Womb, for the Wombe is the field of generation; and if this field be corrupt, and not well dispo­sed, it is in vain to expect any fruit, let it be never so well tilled and sown, for the Womb is subject to many di­seases, and thence it followes, that it may be often unfit for generation, distempers many are subject to it, as over much heat, and over much cold. Women whose Wombs are too thick and cold, cannot in any wise conceive, [Page 117]because coldness extinguisheth the na­tural heat of the humane Seed.

Another cause of barrenness may be, immoderate moisture of the Womb, which destroys the Seed of the man, as Corn sown in ponds and marshes.

A third cause of barrenness of the Woman, is, over much dryness of the Womb: so that the humane Seed pe­risheth for want of nutriment, and be­comes as Corn sown upon stones, or sandy ground.

A fourth cause of womens barren­ness is, the immoderate heat of the Womb, which scorcheth up the Seed of man, as Corn sown in the drought of Summer; for immoderate heat hurts all the parts of the Body, and no Conception can live, or be nouri­shed in that woman.

Many other may be the distempers which the Womb is subject to, that may render it unfit for Conception, and be the cause of barrenness, as when unnatural humors, are ingen­dred in the Womb, too much flegm, Tympanies, worms, wind, water or any such peccant humour, abounding contrary to nature.

But amongst all other causes, which produce fertility, or barrenness to a woman, the monethly Terms are greatly to be respected, as hinderers or furtherers thereof; if they come not in due order, it must necessarily cause barrennesse of that woman to fol­low; but of them we have already spoken, and given directions how to promote and further the same.

But having sufficiently spoken of the causes of barrenness in man and wo­man, we shall methodically proceed for procreation sake, to lay down such remedies, as may naturally serve to prefer generation, and hinder acci­dental barrenness in either.

But if in men the cause be, and that in the shortness of the penis, I cannot help that: the women must in that case help themselves as well as they can: of any too long there is sel­dom any complaint.

A woman may also have some other accidentall causes, which may hinder her conception; as sudden frights, and anger, fear, grief, and per­turbations [Page 119]of the mind, too violent exercise or stirring after Carnal copu­pulation, leaping, dancing, running, or the like.

If the cause of barrenness be in the man, through over much hear in his Seed, the woman may easily see! that in receiving it.

If the nature of the woman be too hot, and by that cause she is unfit for Copulation, it may appear by these Signs.

Such a woman, whose cause of bar­renness is by reason of too much heat, she hath her Terms or Flowers very little, and they are mixt with some yellownesse; such a woman is very hasty and Chollerick, quick witted and crafty, thirsty and desirous after Carnal Copulation, her pulse very swift.

Some say that by these signes you may know where the fault lies, whe­ther in the man or the woman: Sprin­kle both Urines of the man and of the woman upon a Lettice leave, and that which dries away first is unfruitful.

Also take five Wheat corns, seven Barley corns, and seven Beans; put them all into an earthen pot, and pisse thereon, and let it stand seven daies; if they begin to sprout, the party is fruitful; if they rot, then barren, be it man or woman.

Another way to know whether a woman be fruitful

Take Mirth, red Storax, and some such like odoriferous things, and make a perfume thereof, which let the wo­man receive into the neck of the Womb through a tunnel; if the wo­man feel the smoke ascend through her Body to her Nose, then she is fruitful.

Another experiment for the same.

Take Garlick and beat it, and let the woman lie on her Back upon it, and if she feel the sent thereof to her Nose; its a sign of fruitfulnesse.

But I could tell you a more infalli­ble rule, for either the man or woman, [Page 121]to find out where the fault lies, but they are too apt to learn it without teaching, therefore I passe it by.

If the barrenness be proceeding from a hot cause, then take these directions.

Let such beware of hot air and hot dwellings if they can; and that they use not too hot cloths about the si­news, and parts of the Womb.

Let them avoid hot meats (I speak now to women) hot Spices, strong Wine, fat meats, warm hearbs use not over much watching, lye not much on the Reins and Kidneys, and as much as possibly may be, eschew great labour, anger, heaviness, and all such motions as disturb the mind, and use moderately cooling things, as thus,

To further Conception, and take away barrenness proceeding of hot causes.

Take oftentimes Conserve of Roses, cold Lozinges made of Dragagant, the Confections of Triasantali; and use [Page 122]to smell to Camphire, Rose water and Saunders.

It is also good to breathe the Basilica, or Liver Vein, and take out four or five ounces of blood, and then take this purge.

A Purge against Barrenness through heat.

Take Electuarium de Epithymo de succo rosarum, of each two drams and a half: whey of milk four ounces: mix them well together, and take it in the mor­ning fasting, sleep after it about an hour and an half, and fast four hours after it, and then drink a good draught of Whey about an hour before you eat any thing.

Another for the same.

Take water Lilly water four ounces; Mandrogara water, one ounce: Sassron, half a scruple: beat the Safron to powder, and mix it with the waters, and drink them warm in the morning, use this eight daies together.

Pills against Barrenness.

Take Broom flowers, Smallage, Pars­ley seed, Comin, Mugwort, Fetherfew, of each half a scruple: Aloes, half an ounce; Indy Salt, Saffron, of each half a dram: beat & mix them all well toge­ther, & put to it five ounces of Fether­few water warm, stop it up close, & let it stand and dry in a warm place; and thus do two or three times one after another. Then make each dram into 6 Pills, and take one of them every other day before supper, all the while the said Potion is used, and afterwards when the drink is done, take one of these Pills every third or fourth day. And after that Potion proceed with this purging Medecine following.

Take Conserve Benedicta lax. one quarter of an ounce: de Psillio; three drams; Elect. de Succo rosarum, one dram: mix them together with Fetherfew water, and drink it in the morning betimes.

About three daies after the Patient hath taken this purge: let her be let blood four or five ounces in the Medi­an vein in the right foot. And then take five daies one after another filed Ivory, a dram and a half in Fetherfew water; and during that time, let her sit in this Bath following, an hour to­gether morning and night.

Take wild yellow rapes, Daucus, Balsam wood and fruit, Ash-keys, of each two handfuls; red Behen, white Behen, Broom flowers, of each a handful; Musk, three grains; Amber, Saffron, of each one scruple; Boil all in water sufficiently, but the Musk, Saffron Amber and Broom flowers, put them into the decoction after it is boiled and strained.

A Confection profitable against barrennes.

Take Pistacia, Pingles, Eringos, of each half an ounce; Saffron, one dram: Lignum Aloes, Galingale, Mace, Ga­riophilata, Balm flowers, red Behen, white Behen, of each four scruples; shaven Ivory, Cassia bark, of each two [Page 125]scruples; syrup of confected Ginger, twelve ounces; white Sugar, six oun­ces: decoct all these well together, in twelve ounces of Balm water, and stir it well together; then put to it of Musk and Amber, of each half a scru­ple. Take hereof the quantity of a Nutmeg three times a day, in the morning an hour before noon, and an hour after supper,

But if the cause of Barrenness in man or woman, be through scarcity or diminution of the natural Seed, then such things are to be taken, as do in­crease Seed, and incite and stir up Ve­nery.

For this is good, yellow Rape seed baked in bread, young fat flesh not too much salted, Saffron, the tailes of Stin­cus, and long Pepper, are good prepa­red in Wine.

Let such parties eschew all sowre, sharp, doughy, and slimy meats, long sleep after meat, surfetting and drun­kennesse, and as near as possibly you can, keep your selves from sorrow, grief, vexation, and care.

To encrease natural seed.

Generally these things following encrease natural seed, and stir up ve­nery, and recover the Seed again, when it is lost, viz. Eggs, Milk, Rice boyled in milk; Sparrows brains, flesh and bones and all; The Stones and Pissels of Bulls, Cocks, Bucks, Rams, and Bores.

Portages good to encrease natural Seed, are such as are made of Beans, Pease, and Lupines: cast away the first bitter broth of the Lupines, and mix the rest with Sugar. French Beans, Wheat sodden in broth. Anniseeds, Fennel-seed, Mustard seed, Colewort seed, and Nettle seed.

Roots good to increase the natu­ral Seed.

Oynions stewed, Garlick, Leeks, yellow Rapes, fresh Ragwort roots, confected Sugar, confected Eringo roots, confected Ginger, Costus roots, Sperage, Thistle roots, Radish roots, [Page 127]Zedoary, confected Assarabacca.

Of fruits, Hazel nuts, Cypress nuts, Pistacia, Almonds, and Marchpane made thereof.

Spices commodious to stir up Venery are,

In general Cinamon, Cardamome, Galingale, long Pepper, Cloves, Gin­ger, and Saffron.

Assa foetida taken a dram and a half at a time in good Wine, is very good for this purpose, and so likewise is Dragagant, Borax is also fit to be taken in like manner.

Of Compositions, these Confections fol­lowing are good to increase the natural Seed.

The Confection Dia Moscha, Aro­maticum rosarum, Diambra, Dianthos, Diagalanga, Tryon pipetion, Dia mar­gariton calidum, & Mithridate, and especially the Confection of Diasaty­rion, but these are dear.

Lozinges, or a Confection to increase the naturall Seed.

Take Ginger, one dram and a half; Almonds, Pingles, Pistacia, of each one ounce; Kernels of Indian Nuts, Sysarum, of each half an ounce; Harts Pisle, five drams: Cinque-foi [...]e, Pal­ma Chri [...]i, one dram and a half: Ga­lingale, Cloves, Cinamon, Mustard­seed, long Pepper, yellow Rape seed, white Behen, of each one dram; Oni­on seed, Radish seed, Rape seed, Ashen keys, of each two scruples: sides of Stymus, tails of Stymus, three drams; Borrage, one quarter of an ounce; Sugar, two pound; boil them altoge­ther in Wine sufficient to make a Confection or Lozinges thereof; and take about the quantity of a Nutmeg at a time.

Another for the same.

Take yellow Rapes, Onions, Spe­rage roots, Mustard seed, Radish seed, Pingles, Ash-keyes, Eringo roots, [Page 127]Satyrion Roots, Costus Roots, Gin­ger, long Pepper, Cresses seeds, of each a like: make all these into fine Pow­der, and mix them well together, and add to every Ounce of the Powder 3. Ounces of clarified Honey, and there­with make it into a Confection: take of this Confection, about 3 drams at a time, with a little Sugar, and new milk.

For the weakness, and debility of the yard of a man, use this Oyntment.

Take Wax, Oyl of Bever-cod, Mar­jerom gentle, and Oyl of Costus, of each a like quantity; make it into an Oyntment, and put to it a little Musk, and therewith annoint the yard, and other members adjacent.

Another Oyntment for the same.

Take of Horse Emmers 3 drams, oyl of white Sesamum, oyl of Lillies, of each one Ounce: pound and bruise the Ants, and put them to the Oyl, and [Page 128]let them stand in the Sun 6 dayes, then strain out the Oyl, and add to it Eu­phorbium 1 scruple, Pepper, Rue, of each one dram; Mustard-seed half a dram: [...]et this again altogether in the Sun, 2 or 3 dayes, then annoint all the Instruments of Generation there­with.

Another for the same.

Take Oyl of Lillies 2 Ounces, Oyl of Bever Cod 1 Ounce, Euphorbium, Pepper, Mustard-seed, of each 1 dram, Muscus half a scruple, mix them toge­ther unto an Oyntment, and use it as the other.

Remedies against barrenness in Women, through Cold.

Care must be taken in this case, to cleanse the womb from all excessive moysture, and not to overcharge the stomack with meat, and refrain from much sleep, and not addict her self to anger, nor sorrow neither, if she can avoid it, to use moderate exercise and [Page 129]stirring, unless it be immediately af­ter she hath bin helping her Husband to get a Child, or endevouring to do it, then let her rest from exercise, and motion of the body, at least 2 houres after it.

Let her abstain from eating of much fish, milk, or fresh cheese and from fat flesh, and Vinegar, these are obnox­ious to the womb.

To cleanse the womb from moysture.

Take a potion prepared of Oximel, of Squils, or of Oximel compositum, and Sirrup of Wormwood, with a de­coction of Annis, Fennel, Comin, and Harts Tongue. And afterwards, take 1 dram of Pill benedicta, once in 14. dayes, and fast 5 houres after it.

A Bath for the same.

Take Storax, Calamita, Field Mints, Asphalatus, Annis, Seseli, Rue, Bal­same wood and fruits, Behen red and white, of each half 1 Ounce; boyl all together in water, and make a Bath [Page 130]thereof, and let the party sit in it up to the navel.

Also use often to annoynt the parts about the womb, with warm and dry­ing Oyl, such as Oyl of Spike, Oyl of Elder, and the like.

Another Bath for the same, wherein the Woman may either bathe her whole body, or sit in it up to the middle.

Take Mugwort, Sage, of each two handfuls, Calamint, Dittany, of each half a handful, Fennel Roots, Spara­gus, Parsley, of each one handful, Bay­berries, Juniper, Annis, Comin, of each two drams, mixe them, and boyl them all in water, and make a Bath thereof, and use it, as before is di­rected.

A Confection good against barrenness, caused through too much coldness, and moysture in the womb.

Take Cinamon, Cardamon, Saffron, Cloves, Mace, long Pepper, Cypers [Page 131]Roots, Nutmegs, Cummin, Lignum Aloes, Cassia wood, of each 1 scruple; Cucubes, Doronicum, of each four scruples; Musk, Amber, Balsom, one dram, fine Sugar 18 Ounces, boyl the Sugar with the rest, with Malmsey, and Buglosse-water, enough to make it in­to a Confection; and take thereof a­bout a spoonful, going to bed, and half a spoonful a little before Supper.

To dry a moyst and slippery womb.

Take Silver Mountain, red Behen, white Behen, Ash Keyes, shaven Ivo­ry, yellow Rape-seed, of each one dram, Cynamon, Mace, Cloves, Ga­lingale, long Pepper, Rosemary flow­ers, Balsom wood, Marjerom gentle, Peny royal, of each 4 scruples, Balm, Bugloss, Citron peels, of each 2 scru­ples; Pearls 1 scruple, Musk 2 grains, white Sugar 24 Oun: seeth these with Malmsey, & make thereof a Confecti­on, and use it as the other.

If there be any infirmity in the re­tentive faculty of the womb, so that it cannot retain and keep the seed inje­cted into it, so as to come in thereby, [Page 132]if the same be caused through over­much coldness of that part, as often­times it doth, which the Woman her self may be sensible of, whether heat or cold do most abound; I say, if cold abound, and weaken the retent ivevir­tue of the womb, then you are to use such things as strengthen, comfort, and warm the same, such are Amber, Frankincense, Mastick, Cloves, Lignum Aloes, Nutmegs, Sage, and the like.

And in this case, it is good to boyl Cypers Roots in the water, and often bathe, and wash the neck of the Matrix therewith.

And for this, it is good to make a fume of Mastick strewed upon Coals, and to receive the same into the Ma­trix below.

An Oyntment for the same.

Take the juyce of Roses, of Pome­granates, Cloves, of each an Ounce, Frankincense, Hypocistis, prepared Coriander, Mastick, Juyce of Sloes, Iron, Drosse, of each one dram, sealed Earth, Starch, of each one Ounce, beat [Page 133]all these together to an Oyntment, and annoint the privy members, and womb often therewith.

But if the operation of the reten­tive faculty of the womb be impedi­ted from performing its natural office through some distemper of heat, then are such Medicines to be applyed, as are cooling, astringent, and corrobo­rating; yet let them be tempered with some warm things.

The cold things to be used for this purpose are these, burnt Harts-horn, Amber, Juyce of sloes.

Hypocistis, burnt Muscle shells, Bo­lus, Dragons blood, terra sigillata, Pomegranate flowers, and Pills, A­corns, and their Cups, Medlars both fruit and bark of the Tree, Services, and Mirtle-seed: of any of these sim­ples, you may make unguents, Plai­sters, Confections and Electuaries, or other Medicines, as occasion shall re­quire.

If any yet desire other Medicines, they may use Plaisters and Pessaries, and trochis for a fumigation; of which here follows; examples.

A Plaister to comfort the womb against barrenness.

Take Landanum 1 Ounce, Storax Calamite, half an Ounce, Cynamon, Cloves, Lignum Aloes, of each 1 dram; Species Diambre, Gallia Moscata, of each half a dram; Oyl of Spikenard, Oyl of Lillies, and Wax a sufficient quantity to make it into a Plaister, or Cerot. This Plaister may be applyed to the womb, and quite down to the lower Region of the Abdomen, and worn thereupon a long time.

For a Fame, these Troches following may be taken.

Take of Mugwort a dram, Mirrhe, Benzoi-Storax, Calamint, of each half a dram, Lignum Aloes 1 scruple, Musk, Amber, of each 10 grains: beat all these together to a Powder, and with Oyl of Spikenard, make Troches of it; put some of it upon Coals, and let the Woman receive the fume thereof through a convenient Instrument.

A Pessary for the same.

Take Mugwort, Ditany, Marioram, of each 1 dram, Aniseeds, Rue, Citron, of each half a dram, Species Galliae Moschatae one scruple, Musk, Amber, Saffron, of each 15 grains, beat them all together into a Masse, and make a Pessary thereof, wrapped up in Linnen, and put it up into the Matrix.

And now we have largely declared to you, the external and internal cau­ses, of natural and accidental barren­ness, and sterility, both in man and woman, and the Physical, both exter­nal and internal means, to be used to remedy the same, what else is to be done, your own natural kindness must excite you to; which if it be but dull, we have given you sufficient Rules, whereby you may quicken the same. Some other things there are, which the Physicians say, do prefer fruitful­ness, by hidden quality, as the stones of a Fox, and the like; but they are already declared, and described in compound Medicines.

Physitians do likewise tell long sto­ries about the time of the year, what time is best for Copulation: all agree, the Spring is the most convenient time, and fit for procreation; for then the blood is in its vigour: and in the heat of Summer, it ought to be forborn al­together, if possible (but then Venus takes most pleasure to be jolly, and to her girles then most opportunities offer themselves.)

But the most convenient and fit time for a Woman to conceive, is immedi­ately after her purgations cease; for then the womb is cleansed from su­perfluous excrements; and the most fit houre for conception, is after meat, and before sleep, that she may sleep, and rest after it.

Chap. X. Of monstrous and unnatural Con­ceptions.

IT followes now in order in the next place, to speak something of Con­ceptions, contrary to nature, and un­natural Births, which is called a de­praved Conception.

For since it is the certain institution and intent of nature, that Women should bring forth perfect man-kind, and nothing else, then it followes, that whatsoever else is conceived in the womb, besides man-kind, the same is a vitious, and depraved conception, against the Rules and Lawes of na­ture.

Which though these vitious and un­natural Conceptions, may be many wayes; yet they may all generally be reduced unto one of these heads, to wit, Monsters, Mola, winde and wa­ter, all which we often finde to be conceived, and grow in the womb.

Of Monsters, there is much writ­ten, either historically, fabulously, or philosophically; but that appertains not to our present intent or purpose.

And therefore the Philosopher in his Book of Generation,2 Phys. 82.4. Gen. A­nimal. and the cau­ses thereof teacheth, that a Monster is nothing else but a peccant vice of deficient nature, whereby nature is impedited, and hindered from effect­ing her end, as it is in any Art, when the Artist fails, by reason of some de­fect in him, that he cannot attain to accomplish his desired end.

And although these unnatural Births may happen many wayes, yet all these errors of nature may be re­ferred to the Diseases proceeding of e­vil composition: as for example, to the Disease in number, as when a man is born with one eye, one foot, or two heads.

Of Diseases of magnitude, the same the figure of the body demonstrates to the rest;Gal de causis morb. 7. which Doctrine, Galen mani­festly teacheth.

But the causes why Monsters are generated, contrary to the intent of [Page 139]nature,Gal. lib. de hist. Phil. lib. 5. plai. Ph. 8. are not fully agreed upon by all. Galen, or rather Plutarch, sayes thus.

Empedocles teacheth, That Monsters are created, if the seed be too much, or too little; too much spread abroad, or seperated, if it be void, or injected by inordinate motion; or because something is added, detracted, trans­posited, or inflamed: or if the womb be distorted, the Vessels corrupted, or the formative vertue be deficient, or do abound: these things hinder the natural conception, and due operati­on of nature.

Chap. XI. Of the unnatural fleshy Conception in the womb, called Mola.

THis unnatural Matter sometimes happens to grow in the wombs of Women, that have no Copulation with men, and causeth the Belly to a­rise, [Page 140]and all signes to appear, as though they were with Child; their Termes staying, the Breasts grow hard, they lose their appetite, or stomach to meat: their complexion groweth pale, and sometimes they may feel a stir­ring about the Matrix, as if they were with Child; yet nevertheless, they bear no Child, which have this mola ingendred in them: Of this writes Aetius, Aetius lib. ult. and Avicen, who saith, that it is a certain hard substance, sometime found to spread it self throughout the whole Matrix.

Aristotle teacheth, that this Mola is nothing else,Lib. 4. Gen. Hin. Cap. 7. but a certain peece of flesh, conceived and ingendred in the womb of a Woman, and he reciteth a story of a certain Woman, that brought forth a lump of flesh which they called Mola.

And hereunto Galen also plainly consents,Gal. 14. usu part. 17.14. Meth. 13 who affirmeth, that this Mola is a peece of unprofitable de­form'd flesh, which is ingendred in the Womb of a Woman, without the Co­pulation with a man, as a Hen hath Eggs without a Cock.

But now a Question may arise, whether the cause of this unnatural Mola, proceed from too much heat, or too much cold, or too much blood?

For Avicen teacheth,Avic. fen. 21.3. trait. 2. cap. 18. that besides the multitude, or superfluity of blood, there is a vehemency of heat, where­in the blood is concocted, and there­by the flesh acquires a form.

But this, Aristotle seems to contra­dict, who manifestly writeth, that the Mola is no otherwise bred, then of impure, and imperfect concoction; and that it hath its Original from the defect and imbecillity of natural heat, And Averroes confirms, that the cause is nothing else but debility and weak­ness of nature, corruption of digesti­on, and losse of the last concoction; and certainly, that rude and deformed flesh, called Mola is ingendred of cru­dities.

This, groweth in the womb in two kinds, like a peece of flesh, putrified without form or figure, resembling ra­ther a peece of spongeous blood, wind & water, then right flesh which hindereth the expelling of the termes, [Page 142]and being mixed with the natural seed, it groweth sometimes to a hard substance.

It is also ingendred of superfluous blood, and the concourse of tough and unconcocted humours, which make the belly swell up, as if the Woman were with Child.

This is an ill accident, and putrifi­eth and spoileth the Matrix, breeding there oftentimes Ulcers and Impost­humes, Dropsies, unnatural Fluxes, or some such like infirmities, bringing death, if it be not well regarded to be prevented.

The sighes whereby they that labour with this unnatural Masse, may be known from Women with Child, are generally these.

The first is motion; for this burthen moveth not as Children do, because there is neither life nor sense in it.

But it may move by accident, ac­cording to the motion of the woman, and the ponderousness thereof, but that is no true motion.

The Belly of Women which labour with this unnatural Masse, is harder [Page 143]then the Belly of women with Child, and will not so easily move from one place to another, as theirs that be with Child.

The Woman that hath this Mola is also more melancholy, then those that are with Child, and their hands and feet more feeble: this Masse also some­times falleth from one side to ano­ther.

A Woman with Child at nine moneths end, is delivered thereof; but they go two, 3, or 4 years, sometimes all their life-time with this burthen. For the cure of this Mola, Hippocrates before all others, prescribes the most perfect method.

The first means to be used, is clean­sing and purging of the whole body.

The second is to mollifie, loosen, and open the Vessels, and ligaments of the Womb, wherewith the Mola is bound and fastned there.

The third is to stir up, and streng­then the expulsive faculty, whereby this burden may the more easily be expelled from the Womb.

All Physicians do agree, that this [Page 144]disease cannot be cured without great difficulty, and sometimes not at all; yet nevertheless, meanes must be used, and first of all purgation, whereby the Belly may be lenified; and amongst all other Medicines; Hiera obtains the chief place; for its molifying and purging quality, the better if it be mixed with Cassia, as in this manner.

Take Species of Hiera simplex, Cas­sia new drawn, of each 1 dram; mix them into a Bolus with Sugar.

A Sirrup for the same.

Take of Oximel simplex one Ounce, decoction of Betony, of Motherwort, Mints, Peny Royal, of each 4 drams, mix them together, and make a Sirrup thereof; but before you take it, take this Bolus and Confection follow­ing.

A Bolus.

Take Conserve of Maidenhair, two drams Species of Dia calamint, 1 scru­ple, mix them and make a Bolus there­of to be taken before the Sirrup.

A Confection for the same.

Take Species Diambre, Diacalam▪ of each half a dram, Sugar 2 Ounces; make a Confection thereof, with White-wine, and take it before the Sirrup.

An excellent potion for this Disease.

Take Elect Diaphen, Hiera, Diacol, of each half a dram, Mel. Ros. Sol. 4. drams, decoction of Betony, of Mugwort, of each a sufficient quanti­ty, to make a potion: let the Patient in this Disease, abstain from cold, and moyst meats, and use this potion fol­lowing, which mollifies the Masse, or Mola, and expels the humors that cause, or increase it. Take St. Johns Wort, Savin, Rosemary, Field Mints, Lovag, Mugwort, Peny Royal, Mad­der, of each one handful; Fennel, Squi­nant, Parsley seed, Calmus, Galingale, of each 1 dram, Hors-radish Roots, 4 Ounces; boyl them all together in a good quantity of water, to make a [Page 146]potion, and take thereof every day 3. or 4. Ounces, mixing therewith about a quarter of an Ounce of this Trochis following.

A Trochis.

Take Cynamon, Mirrhe, of each 2. drams and a half, Rue, Savin, Field Mints, Peny Royal, Madder, Sagape­num, Opopanacum, of each, 1 dram; Cardamum, Juniper-wood, Rosema­ry, of each, 1 dram & a half: dry them all to powder, & make Troches there­of, and use it, as above is directed.

Also for this Disease, this follow­ing is a cheap and ready Medicine.

Take 3 Ounces of warm Fetherfew­water, every morning fasting, for two moneths together, and fast 4 houres after it. And every fourth day during the time she drinketh the water, let her take one of these Pills following.

Pills for the Mola.

Take Galbanum, 1 quarter of an Ounce, Flowers of Mugwort, St. Johns [Page 147]wort, Assarabacca, of each 1 scruple, dissolve the Galbanum in good wine, and make thereof 6 Pills, of a dram, and take one at a time, in 4 dayes, as before is directed.

A Bath for the same.

Take Mugwort, Camomile, Dill, Holly-hock Roots, Mallowes, of each one handful; Linseed, Fenegreek, An­niseed, Fennel-seed, of each one dram; make a decoction thereof in common water for a Bath, and let the Woman sit hot in it, up to her breasts; and af­ter use this Oyntment for the same purpose.

Take juyce of Holli-hocks, 2 Oun­ces, Goosgrease, Hens grease, of each, one Ounce; Oyl of sweet Almonds, of white Lillies, of each half an ounce, mixe them to an Oyntment, and therewith annoint all the external parts against the fire.

Inwardly, let her also take Dia ca­lamint, Trochis of Mirrhe, and in a word, whatsoever is good to provoke [Page 148]the termes, and to drive forth the se­cundide, and expell a dead Child, the same is effectual for this Disease; of which shall be spoken in the ensuing discourse, of hard Labours.

We have now at large, written of all special accidents and infirmities, incident to the womb, and parts of generation, and given perfect di­rections for remedies for the same: yet nevertheless, though the humane seed may be received and contained, yet a mischance may follow, or other­wise a weak and feeble fruit, that it cannot come to perfection; and at last, a difficult and hard labour, are many if not most of the Daughters of Eve subject to, whereby oft-times, their lives are in danger thereby, if not quite lost, with the fruit and all: there­fore concerning these infirmities, and what belongs to fruit-bearing Wo­men, and their delivery, is the inten­ded subject of the subsequent part of this Book, and first, of the debility, or weakness of the child in its Mo­thers womb.

Chap. XII. Of the weakness of Children in the Womb.

SUch is the frailty of humane na­ture, that the Child is subject to sickness, even in his Mothers womb; no great marvel then, if men are all their lives encumbred with casualties, when they begin with them, even be­fore they have a visible being; the sick­ness of Children in the womb, not be­ing obvious to the eye, is the more difficult to finde out; but the signes to know it are these,

If the Woman have her termes much, being with Child, it must argue debility of the Child, because his nou­rishment and sustenance is taken away from him.

If Milk flow from Women with Child, its evident the Child is weak, and not strong enough to draw his nourishment to him.

If a Woman with Child be af­flicted with a strong and violent loos­ness, there is great danger of a mis­chance.

But the strength or weakness of the Child, depends on heat and cold, un­der which are comprehended all acci­dents whatsoever.

If the Child be weak through im­moderate heat, and dryeth, then the remedy is to purge the Mother of Choler; for which this following is a convenient Medicine.

Take Conserve of Prunes, half an Ounce, three Ounces of whay, of milk, give it her in the morning, and let her fast 5 houres after it.

Another for the same.

Take Cassia extracted out of the Cane one Ounce, and put to it 4 Oun­ces of Sorrel-water, or Barley-water, and give it in like manner as the o­ther.

Another safe, but stronger Medi­cine, both for the Mother and the Child, is this following.

Take 2 Ounces of Manna, and 3. or 4. Ounces of Whay, mixed with it, and use it as the other.

For the same, you may also steep in the same quantity of Whay, a dram of Rubarb one night, and strain it out well; or, if you will, take half a dram of Rubarb in powder in some whay.

Let the Woman use such dyet, as is cooling, and moystning, as Barley-water, Lettice, and use Verjuice, and juyce of Lemons with her meat: En­dive water, & Syrrup of Roses, & En­dive, & succoury water, are good in this case. Forbear all things, which provoke vomiting, or which force U­rine or blood.

Let the Woman 3 or 4 times every day, cool and quench her thirst with Barley-water, having half an Ounce of Syrrup of leaves mixt with it.

An external Medicine for this Dis­ease, if you feel great heat to abound, may be this.

Take Citron water, Violet water, of each 6. Ounces, Sorrel-water, 12. Ounces, Red Sanders, burnt Ivory, Sorrel seed, of each one scruple, Saf­fron, [Page 152]half a scruple, Vinegar 3 spoon­fuls, mix them all together, and wet a Linnen Cloth in it, and lay it on the privities, and on the small of the back.

Take also one Ounce of Pompeon Peels, Oyl of Roses, Oyl of Water-Lillies, of each one Ounce and a half, Housleek one Ounce, temper them all together, and annoint the back and privities therewith 3. or 4. times a day.

But if the cause of weakness, or de­bility of the Child in its Mothers Womb, proceed from cold and moyst­ness, then are contrary medicines to be used; of which these following are approved.

Take Buglosse water, Saffron seeds, Agarins, Hermodactils, of each 1 scru­ple, Cynamon, Ginger, Roses, Cori­ander prepared, of each 4 grains, steep them one night in the Buglosse water, then strain it, and drink it in the morning fasting.

Another for the same.

Take Fethersew-water, Balm wa­ter, of each one Ounce and a half, Be­nedicta laxativa one Ounce, Sugar half an Ounce, mix them, and infuse them together one night, then strain it out, and use it as the other.

Have a care to use a good order of Dyet, and such things as warm and dry; boyl Sage, Mints, and Rosemary in her Portage, and use to drink red Wine with steeled water.

To mundifie and cleanse the bad hu­mours, this Medicine following is ve­ry good.

Take juyce of Mints 4 Ounces, A­garick one dram, Ginger, Roses, of each 4 grains; Manna half an Ounce, steep the Agarick in the juyce of Mints a dayes, and nights; then put the Manna, Roses, and Ginger to it, let it stand a while, and dry against the fire, and make it into Pills, and take them.

Use this oftentimes; for they gent­ly [Page 154]purge and dry up the warty humors without pain or anguish.

A Plaister to remedy the corrupt humours.

Take Roses, Cipers Nuts, burnt I­vory, Sandaraca, of each 1 dram, Ro­sen 3 Ounces; boyl the Rosen in red Vinegar, till the Vinegar be consu­med, then mix the other things with it, and make 2 Plaisters of it, and ap­ply one to the back, and the other to the womb.

Another excellent good Plaister to streng­then Women with Child, that do not use to go out half their times.

Take Oyl of Quinces, Oyl of Ro­ses, Oyl of Mints, of each 1 ounce and a half, Comphrey, Blood-stone, red Coral, Sandaraca, Date-stones burnt, of each 1 dram, mix it with a suffici­ent quantity of Wax, to make a Salve thereof; and with this annoint the Kidneys and Mother.

Chap. XIII. Of Mischances, and to prevent the same.

IT oftentimes comes to passe with women with child, as with the fruit upon a Tree; which being young and tender, hangs on brittle stalks, and is easily blown off with every wind; nay, when it is come to its full growth, and is stronger, sometimes forcible winds bruises, or blowes, cause them to fall off; but when they come to their per­fect time of ripeness, they fall of them­selves.

So it is in this occult operation of nature, many accidents sometimes happen to the Tree, which bring the fruit to an untimely birth; and of­tentimes, not without peril of the Womans life, nature being dead in the Child, that it cannot help it self; whereas in those that are alive, & of their full time, nature helps forward the birth, the Infant it self striving to finde a way into the World.

This may be perceived by the breasts; for if they be small, weak, and slack in Women with Child, then is a mis­chance to be expected; for then the Child wants nourishment, and pines, and dies; also impatiency, or vio­lent motion, many times breaks the secundine, and then the fruit falls a­way.

Signes of a mischance approaching, are also pains of the Back-bone, Bel­ly, and privities: to prevent which, let the Woman with Child, beware sharp and bitter meats, and drinks; avoid much anger and violent motion, and exercise; use oftentimes to drink red Wine, and keep the body soluble: To do which, if need require, she may use the decoction of Mallowes, Mercu­ry, and stew'd Prumes; forbear Cly­sters, and strong Medicines; but if there be any great obstruction in the body, then let her eat Cassia out of the Pipes, or Cassia new extracted; espe­cially, if the neck of the matrix have any issue, or overmuch moysture, then use a little Rubarb in powder, mixed with the Cassia, which without trou­ble, [Page 157]or danger, doth cleanse Flegme, and Choler.

For to stay the slipperiness of the Matrix, take Pomegranate Pills, and pound them to powder grosly, and boyl them in Oyl of Lillies, and inject the same into the Matrix.

A Pessary excellent good for the same.

Take Mastick, Mirrhe, Gallia Mus­cata, of each half a dram; mix them with one ounce of Goos-grease, & role it up in Sheeps Wooll, and put it up into the place.

An Oyntment to strengthen Women with Child.

Take Cypress Nuts, Galls, Myrtle-seed Juyce of Sloes, Hypocistis, of each half a dram, Blood stone, Amber, Dragons blood, Bolus, of each one dram and a half, reffuse of Iron, half an ounce, innermost Peels of Chesnuts, one ounce: decoct the reffuse of Iron a good while in Vinegar, then beat them all together in a Morter, to an Oynt­ment, with 3 or 4 whites of Eggs, and annoint the belly therewith, 4 times a day.

Another Oyntment for the same.

Take Oyl of Nuts 4 Ounces, Bar­rowes grease 1 ounce & a half, Cypres Nuts, Mastick, of each 1 dram and an half, boyl them together gently, the space of five houres, and therewith annoint the Matrix, Womb, and Reins of the Back.

A Plaister for the same.

Take Dragagant, Gum, Bdellium, of each 1 quarter of an oun. Juyce of Sloes Frankincense, Hypocistis, Sandaraca, of each one dram, Bolus, Dragons blood, of each 1 quarter of an ounce, wax, half an Ounce, Paper glew 2 ounces: dis­solve the glew in red Wine-Vinegar, then temper them all together into a Plaister, and apply it to the womb and privities.

For an Ague in Women with Child.

Take Barley meal, Juyce of Sloes, and Housleek, what quantity you see convenient, temper it with Vinegar, and lay it upon the belly, use it often: this defends the Child from all acci­dents of an Ague.

To prevent miscarriage through wind.

Boil Cominseed in water, and take three or four spoonfuls of that water, with a dram of Mithridate, twice a week.

Chap. XIIII. To expell and drive out the dead Childe.

FOr the expulsion or delivery of a child that is dead, the same Mede­cines that are prescribed to drive forth the unnaturall excrement, called, Mola, and to provoke the Terms, are good to be used.

But first be sure that the child is dead, and do not go about to expel a live Child instead of a dead one, which may be known by these signes. If the Child be dead in the Womb, then [Page 160]doth the woman feel great pain in the optick Nerves of her Eys, and behind the Neck, and on the Back-bone, with great pain and anguish in her lower parts. And the Burden alwaies falls to that side she lies on, because the Li­gaments of the Secundine, have no power to hold it in one place; the thickness of the upper part of the Bel­ly sinks down, and the woman feels much pain, and cold about the neck of the Matrix.

Also, if one hold a warm hand long upon the Belly, and feel no stir­ring, the Child is dead; these are signs the Child is dead, before it come to putrefaction.

But when it beginneth to stinke and putrifie, which will be in three daies space after it is dead; the woman will have a stinking breath, stinking cor­ruption issues from the Matrix, and pieces of stinking flesh, will at last be expelled from the Womb: then means is to be used to clense the Womb of the dead Child, and to preserve and strengthen the heart from the corrup­tion of filthy sents ascending to it, [Page 161]which may be done, by this powder following.

Take white Diplamus, one dram and a half; Citron peels and seeds, each half a dram; Pearls prepared, four scruples; Coriander prepared, a scruple; Roses, two scruples; Sugar, two ounces and a half; make them all to fine powder, and take thereof about a quarter of an ounce at once in drink.

Juice of Vervaine and Hysop drunk in Wine, is good to expel the dead Child.

The innermost skins of the Maws of Hens, and Capons washed in Wine, and then dryed to powder; and give thereof a dram in Wine, broth, or Rose water, is good to expell a dead Child, and the Secundine.

For the same, take Betony and Rue, of each a handful; juyce of Salomons seal, an ounce; boyl it well in a pint of white Wine, and strain it, and give her to drink.

Linseed is very good for the same, either to drink the decoction, or Bathe therein.

Also, take Mirth the quantity of a Hazle-nut stamped, & taken in Wine; or Mugwort water, is good for the same.

For women that are strong; take about a spoonful of the juyce of Gar­lick, with wine or Honey.

If a woman chance to miscarry through a fright, or some such acci­dent: then take a Crab and stamp it, and wring out the juyce, and drink it with water of Mugwort.

Pills to expel a dead Child.

Take Trochis of Mirth, one scruple; Galbanum, half a scruple: make five Pills thereof, with Penny-royal wa­ter.

Another for the same.

Take of the fruit of the Savine tree, one quarter of an ounce; Assa foetida, Ammoniacum, Madder, of each half a dram; make 11. Pills hereof, and take one at a time three times a day, morning, night and at four of the clock in the afternoone.

A Fume to expel the dead Child.

Take some shavings of an Asses hoof, or of a Horses, if you cannot get the other, and make a fume thereof, and let the woman sit over it.

Basilium is good for the same to be used in like manner, and so is likewise the fume of Laudanum, and Galba­num.

A Bath to expel a dead Child.

Take ten handfuls of Mints, and boyl them well in a sufficient quantity of water, and let the woman sit there­in up to the middle.

Chap. XV. Of hard Labour, and means to pro­cure easie Delivery.

THat all women should bear chil­dren with pain and sorrow, was a punishment inflicted on them by God, for the disobedience of the first Mother; for which cause they under­go more anguish, and peril in bring­ing forth, then any other Creatures.

Yet nevertheless, there may be ma­ny causes, and accidents which render the delivery more dangerous and dif­ficult in some then in others; for which our purpose is here, to pre­scribe some remedies.

A most excellent Plaister to strengthen women with child, to wear all the time they be with child,

Take oyl Olive, two pound & four ounces; red Lead, one pound; Spa­nish Sope, twelve ounces; Incorpo­rate [Page 165]them altogether in an earthen pot, and when the Sope cometh up­wards, put it upon a small fire of coals: and continue it an hour and a half, stirring it with an Iron or stick; then drop a drop of it upon a trencher, if it cleave not, it is enough: spread it on cloths, or lay it on a board till it cools, then make it up into Rolls; it will last twenty years, the older, the better; and when you have occasion to use it, for this purpose, spread a Plaister of it, and apply it to the Back [...] and when you have tryed it, you will give me thanks for it; It is likewise good for the bloody Flux, Running of the Reins, or any weakness in the Back, for any bruise, to draw out a Thorn out of the flesh, and easeth Cornes, and is good for a strain, and for the Head-ach, being applyed to the Temples.

But to proceed, when the woman with child, begins to draw near her time; then let her use such meats and drinks as nourish well, but use no ex­cesse of either; but especially let her take care to keep her Body soluble, [Page 166]for which, and also to prepare the Bo­dy for an easy delivery, this Bath is ve­ry good to be used.

A Bath good for women with Child when they draw near their time, to procure easie delivery.

Take Holly-hock roots and leaves, two handfuls, Mallows, Betony, of each one handful; Mugwort, Marjo­ram, Mints, Camomile, of each half a handful; Linseed two handfuls; bruise the Linseed grosly, and put that toge­ther with the hearbs into two bags, and boyl them well in water, enough to make a Bath for the woman to sit in up to the Navel when it is warm; and let her sit upon one bag, and hold the other upon her Navel; And after­wards, use to annoint the Belly, Back, and privities with this Salve follow­ing, being warmed.

A preparative Salve to cause easy deli­very in Child bearing women.

Take oyl of sweet Almonds, of [Page 167]Lillies, Violets, of each-half an ounce; Linseed, Holly-hock roots, Fenu­greek, Butter, Hens grease of each one quarter of an ounce; Quince kernels, Dragagant, of each an ounce: stamp the seeds small, and slice the roots, and boyl them all together in rain water; then take out the Musci­lage, and temper the same with the oyl; then let the powned Dragagant and Hens grease boyl so long, till the Muscilage, be consumed: then make thereof a Salve, and annoint there­with as before is directed.

Another Ointment for the same.

Take oyl of sweet Almonds, of Lil­lies, of Violets, each half an ounce: Hens grease, Ducks grease three drams: mix them together with Wax, as much as is needful to make a Salve, and use it as the other.

With any of these Salves, a woman is to be annointed about the parts be­fore mentioned, every day the space of five or six weeks before her time.

Now when the time of Labour is [Page 168]come, then use any of these things which follow, as the cause requires; but above all things, this powder fol­lowing is most effectual.

An excellent Powder for women in tra­vel with Child-bearing.

Take Dittany of Crete, Penny-roy­all, Aristolochia round, each half a scruple: Cinamon, Saffron, of each twelve grains: Let them be all beaten into a fine powder, and given in Wine or some convenient decoction, as the decoction of red Pease, of Penny-royal, or of Parsley.

For outward Medecines, there be many things used to be held to the privities, as, Egrimony with the roots to be held to the Matrix, and immedi­ately after the birth to be thrown away, lest it draw down the Matrix: also Henbane roots, Polypody roots, & Bistorta, are very good for the same.

Also, take Polypody roots and Mal­lows of each a handful, and a hand­ful of Mugwort: bruise them small, and boyl them well, and apply it mo­derately warm upon the Matrix, and [Page 169]after the Delivery, immediately take it away.

Some use to tie a Snakes skin about the Thigh; but what vertue there is in that, they know that have tryed it.

Bay-berries beat, and applyed to the Navel, are good to further the Birth; but inwardly this Powder is commended.

Take Cinamon, Mirrh, of each half a dram; make them into powder, and give it with a little White-wine,

Another for the same.

Take Cinamon, one dram: Saffron, half a dram: Cassia wood, Cassia pipes, of each two scruples: scrape off the uttermost black bark from the Cassia Pipes, and make it all into fine pow­der, and give it four or five times in the decoction of red Pease.

Pills for the same.

Take Mirrh, Bever-cod, red Storax, of each half a scruple: Cinamon, Sa­vin, of each half a scruple; make it [Page 170]into Pills, with the decoction of red Pease, and so give it.

Another for the same.

Take Mirth, Costus, red Storax, of each half a dram: Ammoniacum, Sa­vin, of each half a dram; beat them very small, and give it in the decoction of red Pease: use it three or four times.

If the throws be too weak, or do not continue, let all sweet savours as Musk, or the like, be kept from the woman in labour; for that hinders throwes, and holds back the Birth. But to forward the Birth, make this decoction.

Take Betony, three handfulls: Mug­wort, one handful; Camomile Pen­ny-royal, Hysop; of each one handful: Linseeds two handfuls: bruise the Linseed grossly, and cut the hearbs small, and put them all in a bag, and boyl it well in Wine and water: with this decoction foment the Matrix, five or six times with a spunge, and then annoint the place with the oyl of Wall-flowers; even to the Neck of [Page 171]the Mother, if it can be done with con­veniency.

But if this help not, then give her a good draught of this Potion following every two hours.

Take Mugwort, Penny-royal, Hy­sop, of each half a handful; Betony one handful: boyl all these in a pint and a half of Renish Wine till the fourth part be consumed, strain it our and put to it half a dram of Saffron, and amongst each draught put half a dram of one of the powders before mentioned.

Also, this following is very good to quickn the throwes,

Take half a dram of beaten Amber, and give it in water of Lillies, or in the decoction of red Pease.

An excellent Medicine to procure ea­sie delivery in women.

Take Pippins, cut them in thin sli­ces, and fry them with oyl of sweet Almonds, and eat thereof in the morning and at four a clock in the af­ternoon, use it constantly a matter of [Page 172]five or six weeks before your time, till you are brought to bed: and mix some oyl of sweet Almonds and Sper­ma coeti together, and annoint the Belly, and Matrix once every day therewith warm, or oftner if you can conveniently.

Another for the same.

Take Hysop, Vervaine, Betony, of each one handful: stamp them small, and strain them in good stale Ale, and let the Patient drink a good draught thereof, it gives present help.

To expel the Secundine or after-Birth.

The Secundine or after-Birth, is that skin or caule wherein the child is for­med and wrapped up till the time it break forth to the Birth, & doth, or at least ought to come away, immediatly after the Birth of the child.

But sometimes it remains behind, and causeth great peril to the wo­man, and many ill accidents, as Agues, stinking breath, pain of the Head, [Page 173]Swooning, and the like, if it be not expelled.

It commonly remains behind when the woman hath had very hard labour, and is thereby grown so weak and fee­ble, that nature hath not strength enough to drive it forth: she must therefore have some comfortable things given her to strengthen and comfort her heart, as, Dia marga [...]iton, and Manus Christi; 'then let her rest a little, and if the Secondine do not follow, annoint the Belly and parts adjacent, with oyl of Lillies, and oyl of Elder flowers, and use such things as are directed for the delivery of a dead child; as, Corn flowers given in Lilly water: also Garlick, half an egg­shell full of the juyce thereof, given in honeyed water, doth expel the dead child, and after-birth as before hath been prescribed.

To ease the After-throws.

Take Spikenard and Squinant, of each one quarter of an ounce: boyl them together in a good quantity of [Page 174]Mugwort water, till half be consu­med, and drink thereof two or three times.

Also to asswage the pain, make a Cawdle with Malmsey, or some other good Wine, and put therein yolks of Eggs and Cinamon, and so give it. For the fame, take Triphes à magna, half an ounce: Saffron half a dram: Mace a scruple; and give this at twice, in warm Wine.

To stay the excessive flood after the Birth.

The Remedies before prescribed for the asswaging of the excessive Flux of the Terms in women, be also very good for this Disease, and for all Women in Child-bed; yet neve­thelesse take this Confection follow­ing.

A Confection for an excessive flood in Women lying in Child-bed.

Take Conserve of Piony one Ounce, Conserve of Roses one ounce, Con­serve of Burrage, Bugios, Balm of each half an ounce, prepared Bolus half a dram, prepared Pearls 1 dram, Cyna­mon 1 dram and a half, mix them all together, and make a Confection thereof.

For the same, use this Powder following.

Take Bolus prepared, Pearls, of each one dram; sealed Earth 2 scruples, Tor­mentil half a dram, Shepheards Purse 1 scruple, Species de gemmis frigidis 1 dram and a half, Roses, Corral, San­ders, of each one scruple, Cynamon 2. scruples and a half, Sugar 3 Ounces, mix them all well together, and take it with Hen-broth.

Lozinges very effectual for the same.

Take Blood-stone 1 dram and a half, red Coral one dram, Tormentil, Tro­chis de Sodio, of each half a dram; scraped Ivory, burnt Hartshorn of each 1 scruple, Pearls prepared 4 scruples, fine Bolus 2. scruples, Shepheards purse, red Sanders, of each a scruple, Cynamon 1 dram, Sugar six ounces; wash the Blood-stone in Plantain-wa­ter, and make a Powder, or Lozinges thereof.

Chap. XVI. Of the superfluity of Milk; and other accidents happening after the Birth.

EXcessive abounding of the milk, af­ter a Woman is delivered, if it flow more than the Child can grow, there oftentimes ensues Imposthumes, and other Inflammations and distempers [Page 177]in the breasts; for Remedies where­of, use these prescriptions following.

The Patient must eat and drink but moderately, and avoid all such things as ingender much blood, & use means to dry and take away the superfluous blood, as Rue and wild Rue, with the seeds Basil, and stampt together, if one take every day a quarter of an ounce, the same is very good to dry up the milk.

To dry up the milk.

Take Rosen a good quantity, and temper it with Cream, and lay it luke-warm over the breasts.

For the same.

Take 8 ounces of Honey, and two pints of water, boyl them well toge­ther, and scum it, and dip therein a threefold Cloth, and lay it on the breasts, and when it is cold, renew it again.

Also for the same, take one dram of Saffron, and 8 ounces of Malmsey, wet a Cloth therein, and lay it on the breasts as aforesaid.

Also take Garden Mints, stamp them, and mix them with Oyl of Ro­ses, and use it as the other.

For a Plaister to dry up the milk, take bean meal, oyl of Roses, and red Vi­negar, a sufficient quantity to make a Plaister, and apply it to the breasts.

For clotted, or congealed milk in the Breasts.

Let Women keep sobriety in eat­ing and drinking, and use moyst meats, that may ingender subtile milk; Mints, Saffron, and Cynamon, is good to be used in their meats.

Take grated bread, new milk, and Oyl of Roses, of each a like quantity, seeth them together to a pap, and lay it warm upon the breasts:

For congealed milk, and pain in the Brests.

Take Cork and burn it to ashes, and temper it with oyl of Roses, and a little Vinegar, and therewith annoint the breast.

A Salve to dissolve congealed milk in the Breasts.

Take Deares Suet 3 quarters of an oun: liquid Styrax 1 oun: Wormwood, Cummin, Dill-seeds, of each 1 ounce; oyl of Wormwood, Ducks grease, of each 1 ounce and an half, Saffron one scruple, make an oyntment or Plaister hereof, and apply it to the breasts.

For milk congealed with Inflammation in the breasts.

Take a quantity of the muscilage of Fleawort, Fenegreek, and Purslain seeds, of each a like; and make an oynt­ment thereof wieh wax, and annoint the breasts therewith.

Also for the same, take Chickweed, and lay it warm upon the breasts.

Also beat oyl of Roses, and Vine­gar of Roses together, and lay it on the breasts.

If the Woman hath taken some ex­treme cold, then take this following, especially, if there be an Ague with it, take Camomile, Melilot, Fennel seeds, Anniseeds, Dill seeds, Fenegreek Lin­seeds, Southernwood, Ginger, Bazil, beat them together, and with oyl of Camomile, make a Plaister of it, and apply it to the breasts.

A good Plaister to dissolve hard knots in the breast.

Take Crums of white bread, Barley meal; Mustard-seeds, Fennel, and Hol­ly hocks rosted under the ashes, of each a like quantity, pound them all well together, and make a Plaister thereof, with oyl of Camomile, and apply it warm to the breasts.

For hardness, and inflammation in the breasts through congealed milk, A Pultis.

Take flowers of Mallowes, Violets, Celendine, Daisies, Cinquefoil, of each 1 handful, boyl them together in two quarts of water, till it come to a pint; then strain it, and mingle it with Wheaten meal, to the thickness of pap, then put to it Hens grease or Hogs Lard, and boyl it again to a Pultis, spread it on a Cloth, about the thick­ness of a finger, and lay it morning and evening, upon an inflamed sore breast.

Another for the same.

Take Bean meale, Mints in Pow­der, each 3 quarters of an ounce, pre­pared Coriander, Pease meal, of each 1 dram; Roses half a dram, fresh but­ter 2 ounces, Muscilage of Linseed one ounce, Muscilage of Fenegreek 3 quar­ters of an ounce, Sheeps Suet, Ducks grease, of each 1 ounce, oyl of Tur­pentine [Page 182]half an ounce, Saffron three grains, temper them all together to a salve or oyntment, and lay it upon the breasts.

For Tumors, or swelling of the breast.

Take Purslain Plantain, of each one handful, Camomile, Melilot, of each one ounce, Barley meal 4 ounces, stamp the Herbs in a morter, to a pap, and then incorporate therewith, oyl of Violets and Roses, enough to make it a salve, and lay it on the sore brests.

Another Medicine for swelling in the breasts, much profitable and easie to be had.

Take a good quantity of Peach leaves, and Rue, and stamp them small, and boyl them in water to a Pultis, and lay it on the grieved place, this will ripen the Imposthume, and ease the pain.

A Plaister for the same.

Take Plantain, Mallowes, of each one handful, Housleek 6 handfuls, boyl them together, till they come to be like grout, then strain it, and adde thereunto, Oyl of Roses 3 ounces, Camomile, Melilot, both beaten, of each an ounce, Barley meal 4 ounces, Bdellium 1 quarter of an ounce, dis­solve the Bdellium in Vineger, and then boyl them all together, to the thickness of a Plaister, and spread it on a Cloth, and apply it to the grieved place.

For Impostumations in the breast.

Impostumations do breed often­times likewise in the breasts, through the congealing of the milk, and ill hu­mours, setling and putrifying there, bringing with them the Canker, Gan­grene, and such like griefs, to the great anguish and misery of the Pati­ent, if not to death, by reason of the tenderness of the place. And many [Page 184]times it happens, by reason of an ob­struction of their termes, which turns our cause of the superfluous blood thi­ther: And therefore, if when there happens any swelling, or anguish in the breasts in this case, if the termes be stopt, use all means possible to pro­voke them speedily, if you mean to a­bate the swelling and pain; and if the swelling increase, then the Liver vein must be opened, or the median. And afterwards take oyl of Roses, and Vi­neger, and seeth a little Camomile therein; and then dip a Cloth in it, and lay it on the breasts, four times a day, refreshing it.

If the Impostumation in the breasts be caused of superfluity of blood, the sign to know it is, it causeth great pain in the breast, redness and much beating.

If it proceed from Choler, then is the pain more raging, and the brest redder, and yellowish, with greater Agues, and the Inflammation is hot­ter then that which proceeds of blood.

If Flegme be the ingendring cause thereof, then the Tumor is but small, the breast white, the pain moderate, and no Ague with it.

An excellent Plaister to consume and cleanse all swellings of the breasts; and also of other members.

Take clarified Honey 6 ounces, Barley meal, 3 ounces and a half, two yolks of Eggs, Mirrhe, Sarcocolla, of each half a dram, Honey of Roses 4. ounces, oyl of Roses 3. ounces: pow­der that which is to be powdered, and boyl the Honey and the meal toge­ther, till it be thick, and then stir the yolks of Eggs amongst it, and the other things; and so make a Plaister of it, and apply it to the grieved place.

When the Tumor or swelling comes to maturity, and breaks, then cleanse it with this Salve.

Take Honey, the juyce of Smal­lage, yolks of Eggs, and Turpentine, of each a sufficient quantity, and make a Salve thereof, and so apply it.

Or else use this Salve following, with a tent of Lint.

Take Wheat-meal, 3 quarters of an ounce, clarified Honey, and juyce of Smallage, of each an ounce, mix them all into a Salve, and use them as hath been directed: this is good to be used with a tent, to cleanse any sore Fistula, or Carbuncle.

But if in case the Tumor, as many times it unhappily doth, grow to a Canker, or Fistula, then must orher means be used, to prevent the eating, or spreading thereof: the Patient must be purged of melancholy humours, and avoid such things as ingender Choler and melancholy, and to seek to prevent the increase of the same; for which this drink following, is very effectual.

Take Time, 1 quarter of an ounce, Polipody, Sene, each 1 dram, Violets, Seeds of Gourds, Cucumbers, Pom­peons, each 1 dram and a half, Cyna­mon, [Page 18]Rapeseed, of each 1 scruple, Hops 1 ounce, boyl them all together in 8. ounces of water till half be consumed, then strain it, and take one ounce of this decoction, in 3 ounces of whay, of Goats milk, and fast 6 houres after it.

Then use outwardly this Plaister following.

Take Fenegreek, Barley meal, of each two Ounces, Mallows 3. hand­fuls, Housleek 8 handfuls, Oyl of Ro­ses 6 ounces: bray the Oyl of Roses in a Leaden Morter, with a Leaden Pestle, and seeth the Herbs in wh [...]y, till they be so tender, you may beat them to a pap, and mix the other things amongst them; and boyl it a­gain in 6 ounces of Nightshade-wa­ter, till it be consumed, and so make a Plaister of it; and first annoint the sore with Oyl of Roses, and then lay the Plaister thereupon.

If the Canker corrode, and spread abroad, then take Barley meal 4 oun­ces, Oyl of Violets, oyl of Roses, each three ounces, Tutty prepared 2. oun­ces, Blood-stone 1 ounce. Bray the [Page 188]oyl of Roses with 4 whites of Eggs; a good while in a Leaden Morter, and likewise beat the Blood-stone in wa­ter of Lillies, then temper them all together, and dip small tents in it, and lay them all on the sore.

Then take one ounce and a half of oyl of Roses prepared in a Leaden Morter, as before, and two ounces of the juyce of Nightshade, 1. ounce of starch, and an ounce and an half of Bo­lus: mix and temper them all together; in a Leaden Morter, and therewith of­ten annoint the breasts round about the Canker or Fistula.

A Plaister for the Fistula.

Take Mummey, Bolus, juyce of steel, Frankincense, Hipocistis, Ma­stick, of each 3 drams, Acorn Cups, Cipers Nuts, Galls, Isinglasse, Draga­gant, Gum, of each 1 ounce: dissolve the Isinglasse in red Wine Vinegar, and mix the other ingredients a­mongst it to a Plaister.

For Clefts, or Chops of the Nipples.

Take Mutton, or Lambs Suet, as much as you please, and after it is mol­ten, and clarified, then wash it in Rose-water, and therewith annoint the Nipples. And thus much for the Diseases in the Breasts.

Chap. XVII. Shewing means and Remedies for those Nurses that went milk.

Having already at large discoursed to you the infirmities, happening by reason of superfluous; or con­gealed milk; and the evil accidents that attend the same, with the means of their prevention and Remedy: it is also convenient for their sakes, who would be Nurses, and cannot for want of milk; to shew them some means to increase it where it is wanting.

Women given much to fretting, or who are by nature lean and sickly, ha­ving a bad digesture in stomach & Li­ver, cannot breed store of milk, nor good milk: also bad meats and drinks, hinder the ingendring of milk, there­fore they ought to be forborn.

And women that would increase their milk, let them eat good meats if they can get it, and drink milk where­in Fennel seed hath been steeped.

If the woman be of a hot nature, and full of Choler, let her drink Bar­ley water and Almond milk, eat Lec­tice with her meat, Burrage, Spin­nage, Goats milk, Cowes milk, and Lamb sodden with Verjuice; And avoid sorrow and anger as much as may be: and comfort the stomach with the Confections of Anniseeds, Carraway and Cominseeds: and like­wise use these seeds sodden in water.

Also, take Anniseeds, two drams and a half beaten, and temper them with the broth of Cole [...]orts, and drink it when you go to bed.

Also, take Barley water and boyl therein green Fennel, and Dill, and sweeten it with Sugar, and drink it at your pleasure.

If you would have an outward means, use this Plaister following.

Take half an ounce of Deers suet, and as much Parsley roots, with the hearbs, an ounce and a half of Barley [Page 192]meal, three drams of red Storax, and three ounces of oyl of sweet Almonds: seeth the roots and hearbs well, and beat them to pap; and then mingle the other amongst them, and lay it warm on the Nipples, it increaseth milk.

Thus have I Counselled women of all sorts, how to free themselves from all casualties, the frailty of their na­ture subjects them to; which when you finde the benefit of, give God the glory, and sin no more, lest a worse thing sall unto thee.

FINIS.

AN APPENDIX TOUCHING The DROPSY.

THis being an infirmity under which many labour, and few are cured thereof partly, nay most, by reason of their inability; I thought it very necessary, having this opportunity put into my hands, to add this small Treatise of the Kinds, Cause, and Cure of Dropsies.

This Disease the Greeks call [...] and [...], the Latins a water between the flesh and the skin, and vulg [...]rly Hydrops or Hydropicus morbus, the Dropsy or an Hydropical disease; which name seems to have b [...]en taken from water which in Greek is called, [...]

Avicenna defineth the Dropsy thus: That it is a material sickness, [Page 2]ingendred from a material, outward, and co [...]d cause, and thereby either the whole Body, or many parts and Mem­bers thereof do swell. All Authors do not agree about it, some call it a Dis­ease, and some place it among the Symptomes; but they that are afflicted with it, need not care by what name it is called, so they were freed from it; therefore I shall not stay upon the de­finition of it, but proceed to directi­ons for the Cure; but be sure it is a laesion and depravation of the digestive faculty, and unconcoction of the blood; whereby the nutritive faculty is hindred, and corrupted throughout the whole Body, and the natural ope­ration of the Liver impedited; and this proceeds from a cold and moist humour, that penetrates through the Body, and swells the Members, puffs up the Face, swells the Feet and Leggs, and the Cods of men: destroys the natural complexion, altering it into a whitely colour, causeth great appetite to drink, and little or none to eat; stoppeth the Terms in women causeth retention both of Stool & Excrement: [Page 3]and sometimes hard Tumors about the Bowels and other parts.

This for the description or definition: yet this Disease hath several degrees, Kinds or Species.

One kind of Dropsy is called Ana­sarca, and Hyposarca; another Ascites; and a third Tympania or Tympanites, or in English Tympanies.

Conserve of Fumitory, is not a miss to be used for cleansing of the blood in all kind of Dropsies, at the begin­ning of them; but to proceed first to this kind of Dropsy called Anasarca.

It is a waterish humour that lyeth between the flesh and the skin, through all the Body causing a swel­ling, and is known by pressing the flesh with ones finger, the dint or im­pression thereof will remain a great while after; the Pulse is slow, the pri­vie members swell, and the party is subject to be afflicted with a looseness, or scowring, and bad digestion of meat, which is the cause of it, that it turns into flegm instead of blood.

If it be a woman, it may be caused through retention or stopping of her [Page 4]Terms; therefore all means possible is to be used, to provoke and drive them down.

Let the Patient be purged with Pills of Rhabarb; and to expel the wa­ter, use this Confection following.

A Confection for the watery Dropsy.

Take Turbith, half an ounce: Her­modactyls, one ounce: wild Saffron seeds peesed, three quarters of an ounce: Ginger, Cinamon Annis [...]eds, of each one scruple: Violets, Sorrel seed, of each one dram: Sugar two ounces: Honey of Roses, four oun­ces, boyl the Honey and Sugar toge­ther with Fumitory water until you may scum it clear: then mix the rest with it, and boyl it to a Confection, take hereof half an ounce in a mor­ning.

Another for the same.

Take Annis, yellow Rape seed, Spi­ca Indiae, of each one scruple: Licoris, Rhabarb, of each one dragme: Asa­rabacca, [Page 5]half a dram; Conserve of Marjorom, one ounce; Conserve of Roses, three ounces: Syrup of Quin­ces and Oximel, a sufficient quantity to make it into a Confection. Take hereof a dram in a morning.

Pills for the same.

Take Pills Aggregative, two scru­ples; Ammoniaci, one scruple: make it into six Pills with Oximel; take two in a morning.

The masse of Pills before mentio­ned, are prepared by the Apotheca­ries, therefore do not startle that they bear no English name; for they are more commonly known by those Ti­tles.

In this Disease, use abstinence from meat and drink, as much as may be; forbear drowsiness and lazinesse, and addict your self to reasonable sweating and exercise.

Of another kinde of Dropsy called Ascites.

This Species of this Disease swelleth only the Belly and Leggs, and the up­per parts dry: and the Belly swel­leth like a Bladder, and soundeth like a drum head, or as the Belly of a rot­ten Sheep will do, if you cl [...]p your hand thereon; that's not unknown to every Clown, then wonder not at this; And if the sick person stir from side to side, the water may be heard forcibly to stir about: the skin is stretched out, so that it receiveth no dint or impression of ones finger as in the other kind of Dropsy; the Pulse is small, wanting vigour of heat to cause motion, and the original of all is the weakness and debility of the Liver, that it cannot exercise its natural fa­culty of concocting the meat and drink into blood, but unnaturally al­tereth the moisture thereof into wa­ter.

This kind of Dropsy may come [Page 7]sometimes from overmuch heat of the Liver, as well as cold.

If it proceed from hot causes, the Urine the Patient avoids is little, and that of a very high red colour, some spots like little stones appearing in it; the party suffereth intolerable thirst; and the more he drinks, the more he desires drink; but it quencheth not his flames, no more then Brimstone and Oyl will quench fire.

This Disease is dangerous, and of­tentimes breaks up the root, or at best strikes near at it.

But for means which God hath gi­ven to be used while time is, take these following,

A Syrup for the Dropsy through heat of the Liver, and to quench the thirsty desires of the Pa­tient in that disease.

Take Endive, four handfuls; Mai­den hair, Harts tongue, of each one handful: Fennel seed, Parsley seed, of each half an ounce: Spica Nardi, Spica Romani, of each a quarter of [Page 8]an ounce; make a decoction hereof, and then boyl it up to a syrrup, with a sufficient quantity of Sugar.

The Body of the Patient in this Dis­ease, is much subject to costiveness, or binding of the Belly; purging there­fore with Clysters, Pills, and Potions, are requisite to be used in this case, and to endeavour to open the obstructions of the Liver, and strengthen the same.

To purge with Rhabarb or the syrup thereof once a week, is very good for this purpose; drink Wormwood Beer or Wine, and use also this gentle purging Potion.

A purging Potion for the dry Dropsy.

Take the flowers of Burrage, Vio­lets, Fumitory, each half an ounce; Licoris, Jujubes, Currans, Worm­wood, each one quarter of an ounce; Prunes, eight or ten: Spikenard, one dram; boyl them altogether in Whey, strain it, and then infuse therein one night, half an ounce of the shells of yellow Mirobalans, so strain it for a Potion.

Clysters are also very necessary and profitable for this Disease; and amongst others, these following are very commendable.

A Clyster for the Dropsie.

Take Bloodwort, Camomil, St. Johns wort, or each one handful; boyl them in well fair water, then take twelve or sixteen ounces of the decoction and add to it Salt, one dram; three ounces of Sallet oyl, and half a dram of Hiera picra, or Caffia extracted; mix them together for a Clister, and give it warm.

For the same another Clister more loosening.

Take Mallows, Holly-hocks, Peers, Camomile, Herb Mercury, of each one handful; boyl these herbs well in water, or in broth of Tripes, or other pottage made of fresh flesh; take 16 ounces of the decoction, and thereun­to add Sallet oyl, Salt, Hiera picra, or Cassia, and Benedicta laxativa, of each [Page 10]half an ounce, wherewith mix the de­coction, and give it for a Clister very warm.

If there be any pain or griping in the Belly, which windeness too often causeth, then use with the Herbs be­fore mentioned, an ounce of Anni­seeds, Fennel seeds and Carraway-seeds, altogether grosly beaten, or the quantity of an ounce of either of them severa [...], which you can get.

Thus for Costiveness, and Obstructi­ons in this Disease; on the contrary sometimes the Patient is subject to scowring, and a red flux with it, for which use these means following.

Give to the Patient the Conserve, & concocted roots of Cicory, Juyce & Marmalade of Quinces, Trochisk and Conserve of Barberries with Vinegar, and such other things as are binding and cooling in operation.

For this Dropsy, and all other kinds, and also for the Green sicknesse too, these Pills following, are excellent.

Take of the Masse of the Pill of Hiera with Agarick, one dram and a half: of the Pill of Opopanax, three drams: of the extract of Rhabarb, of Gentian root, of Centory the lesse, each one dram; Steel prepared, four drams; the root of Aaron prepared, Tartar vitriolated, each two scruples; Chymical oyl of Wormwood, one scruple: oyl of Cinamon, of Cloves, each six drops: Syrup of the Five roots, a sufficient quantity to make it into Pills; make of every dram hereof six Pills; let the Patient take two here­of every morning, and as many at four a clock in the afternoon, and drink after it a draught of Wormwood-Wine or Ale, stirring or excercising after it the space of an hour.

To provoke and expel the Urine, is very requisite in this Disease; for which these things following are very good.

Take Rue, St. Johns wort, Penny­royal, Sage, Marjoram, Wormwood, Licoris, Anniseeds, Fennel roots, Elecampane roots, of each one quar­ter of an ounce; boyl them a little in a quart of White-wine, and take thereof three ounces morning and night.

For the same.

Take a head or two of Garlick, and a handful of St Johns wort; boyl them together in a pint of White-wine, till a third part be wasted: strain it, and drink three or four spoofuls thereof at a time morning and evening.

The roots of great Fern boyled in White-wine, and drunk, (the Wine I mean, not the roots) is verygood for this purpose.

This Decoction following, is also good for the same.

Take the roots of Nettles, Parsley, Fennel, Elecampane, Licoris, Asara­bacca, [Page 13]of each one dram; boyl them a little in a quart of White-wine, and drink thereof as of the former.

Outwardly for this Disease may be used Pultisses, Unguents, and Plaisters; such as dry and expel wind and do strengthen and mollifie the Belly and lower parts, for which purpose, this Plaister following may effectually be used.

Take Coloquint, Holly-hock seeds, Diagridion, Aloes, Mirth, Mallowes roots, Béellion, of each one dram and a half; Ireos, three drams: Mal­lows seeds, wild Cucumbers, Carda­mome, Euphorbium, of each three drams: Boreas, Salgem, of each one quarter of one ounce; mix all these and incorporate them well together, with Goose grease, Ducks grease, Calves suet and Hoggs suet, as much as is sufficient to make them into a Plaister or salve, and apply it all over the Belly.

For the same, is good to temper the Salve of Bay-berries with Cowes [Page 14]or Goats dung, and use it as the for­mer.

For the swelling of the privy members in this Disease, this Salve follow­ing is to be used.

Take Annis, Fennel, and Comin seeds, beaten small together, of each one ounce and a half; Bean meale Ebalus, the juyce of Elder leaves, and Wine a sufficient quantity to make it a Salve or Pultis, and lay it on the Bel­ly and privities.

For the same.

Take Barley meale, Cypress roots, Sheeps dung, Borax and Bolus, of each a like quantity: beat them together, and make a Plaister thereof with Hoggs grease or Goose grease, and ap­ply it to the Belly and privities.

The oyl of Camomile and Rue, mixed together, is a very good Oint­ment for the dropsy,

Take notice also by the way, that Sweating, and Bathing in hot dry Baths, is very effectual for all kind of Dropsies.

Of the kind of Dropsie, called Tym­panies.

There are three sorts of Tympanies, the one called Aqupsa, or the watery Tympany or Dropsy, of which we have already treated.

A second called Ventosa, or a Drop­sy or Tympany of wind, of which we now proceed to speak, which is caused more of wind then water, and thence deriveth its name; and in this Disease the Belly swelleth up very high, and the Navel starteth out; the Belly is very hard and soundeth, if one thereon clap his hand.

There is another Species called Carnosa, by which may be understood fatnesse of the Belly, or as some say, gorre Bellies; but it is, in plain En­glish, a fleshy Tympany, or fleshy swelling, no way dangerous at all, but Maids Bellies are much subject to this [Page 16]Tympany; and for their Cure the best is mother Midwife, and therefore, I say no more of it, but leave it to her discretion.

But for the Cure of the Ventosa, or windy Tympany or Dropsy, use these Rules following.

Avoid all windy meats, eschew cold, and keep warm: use also Swea­ting, and use the Confection de Baccis Lauri, be moderate in Dyet and use exercise.

Use also these Conserves, or any of them, as Conserve of Elder leaves, Betony, Gilly-flowers, Rosemary, Fennel, Annis, Comin or the like.

A Suppository for the same.

Take Salgem, Rue, Bever-cod, Eu­phorbium, Nettle seed, of each one dram; mix it with about three oun­ces of decocted Honey, and thereof make Suppositories.

Use to annoint the Belly with hot Oyles, such as are oyl of Dill, oyl of Rue, Costus, and Bay-berries.

A Plaister for the same effectual.

Take Goats dung or Sheeps dung dryed twelve ounces, roots of wild Cucumbers, roots of Ebulus, of each two ounces; Barley meal, 12 ounces: steeled Vinegar, four ounces; boyl it all well in sharp Lee, and make there­of a Plaister, which apply warm to the Belly, or any part of the Body swel­led with wind, to open the Pores, and draw out the same.

A Clister effectual for the same,

Take Ireos, Hysop, Smallage, Rue, Barefoot, of each one handful; Annis, Fennel, Ameos, Bay-berries, of each half an ounce: boyl all these very well in clean water, then take of this De­coction twelve or sixteen ounces, ac­cording to the strength of the Patient, and add to it clarified Honey, and oyl of Rue, of each one ounce and a half; and stone Salt, one dram: so make it into a Clister, and administer it.

A Syrup for the Dropsy.

Take green roots of Ireos, or in En­glish, Flowerdeluce (and yet that name is not quite English neither) twenty four ounces; cut them in pieces, and infuse them three days in Well water, as much as will onely cover them, stirring them twice a day: then strain that water from them, & reserve it in a clean pot, & add the like quantity of fresh water to them, doing as you did before; then strain the second water, and mix both together, and boyl it with Sugar a little; and then add thereunto Scabious and Mayden-hair, of each one handful; Sperage roots, Fennel roots, and Ireos roots, of each half a handful; peeled Melon seed, Gourd seeds, Cucumber seeds peeled, Pompeon seeds, Purslane seeds Cicory, Endive and Lettice seed, of each one quarter of an ounce; Fennel, Annis, Sperage, and Smallage seed, of each half a dram; Millet and Winter Cher­ries, of each three drams; fat dates and figs, of each six; Licoris and Mad­der, [Page 19]of each five drams; boyl all toge­ther to the wasting of half, and then strain it, and boil up the decoction to a syrup with Sugar: of this syrup, give about an ounce at a time, and sometimes more, and to strengthen the Liver, steep therein a quarter of an ounce of Rhabarb.

Also for the Dropsy, these syrups are good to be used; as, syrup of Worm­wood, of the Five roots, of Maiden-hair, and Betony, and Wines com­pounded with Wormwood, Egremo­ny, Calamint, Cinamon, odoriferous seeds, and things of the like nature: Abstain from all excesse, and use such meats and drinks as are of a drying, heating, attenuating nature, & easy of digestion; forbear new sweet Wine, or drink; and in all things use measure, for therein consisteth the greatest virtue.

FINIS.

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