and fyre: And euery of thes hath two ProPyrteis; The Erthe
is colde and dry; The watyr is colde and moiste; The eeire hote
and moyste; The fyre hote and dry. In the body of euery man
ben iiije humorus, answarynge to the iiije elementes: and like
propyrteis therof they haue. Malencoly, colde and dry; Fleme,
colde and moysty; Sangyne, hote and̛ moyste; Colerike, hote
and dry; And for-als-moche as thes Propyrteis bene contraryus,
ne may not the body alway endure, but hit moste turne and
repayre into the iiije [folio 77bL] Elementes of wych hit was makyd̛. And
thegh the body may not alway endure, hit may endure longe
tyme, yf the kynde of man be Well y-noryschid and in due
manere, by ettynge and drynkynge like as we sene the mecche
of a candill whych is y-lyghtid, Is y-nurshit by the oile Wych
is about hit, and yf the oy[le ne] [Blotted here.] were, the mecche shulde
bene anoone brent and destruet. In the Same manere yf [th]e
kyndely hette ne were y-nurshit by mette and drynke, in shorte
tyme hit wolde destru the body. Ouer that hit most haue
mesure and proporcion̄, for yf the mecche be ouer depe y-sette
in the oyle, hit shall anoone be y-queynte; And yf a man do
surfete of mette and drynke, the kyndely hette shal be enfebelit;
and anoone by that may a man fall Into Sekenys and aftyr that
dey. for Salamon Sayth, "Many Pepill bene Perishid by
glotony." Mesure in al thynge helth kepyth, and therfor haue
mesure in mete and drynke, in slepynge in wakynge, in trauaill
in reste, in blode-lettynge and in all othyr thyngis. And whoso
doth not so, he shal fale into dyuers sekenys Sudaynly. And
who-so may not atte the ryght mesure, radyr hym holde to the
lytill than to the moche; More lyghtyr may the defaute be
restorid, than the super-fluyte be y-Put away. Of ypocras the
vyse leche hit is writte, that grete abstynence he dide, and
therfor in a certayne tyme he wox febill of body, and oone of his
disciplis to hym sayde, "Fayre Maystyr, yf ye wolde ette welle,
ye sholde not be so febill." Ypocras answarid, "Fayre sone, I
wolde ette forto lyfe, and not lyfe to ette." Wel hit Is knowen
that tho men whych kepyth reysonabill diette and lywen
temprely, bene more hole of body, of bettyr vndyrstondynge, more
delyuerir, more strongyr, more lyueloker, more sufferynge and
durynge trauailles and dyssayses, and bene of more longyr lyfe.