A prognostication for euer, made by Erra Pater, a Iew, borne in Iury, Doctor in Astronomie and Phisicke very profitable for to keepe the body in health: and also Ptholomeus saith the same.

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Title
A prognostication for euer, made by Erra Pater, a Iew, borne in Iury, Doctor in Astronomie and Phisicke very profitable for to keepe the body in health: and also Ptholomeus saith the same.
Author
Erra Pater.
Publication
[London] :: Printed by Thomas Este,
[ca. 1605]
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Subject terms
Almanacs, English -- Early works to 1800.
Astrology -- Early works to 1800.
Cite this Item
"A prognostication for euer, made by Erra Pater, a Iew, borne in Iury, Doctor in Astronomie and Phisicke very profitable for to keepe the body in health: and also Ptholomeus saith the same." In the digital collection Early English Books Online. https://name.umdl.umich.edu/A17624.0001.001. University of Michigan Library Digital Collections. Accessed May 20, 2024.

Pages

That is to say.

¶ In Ianuarie are eight daies, that is to say, the first, the second, the fourth, the fift, the tenth, the fiftéenth, the seauen∣téenth, and the ninetéenth.

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In Februarie are thrée daies: the viii the x. and the xvii.ii
In March are thrée daies, the xv. the xvi and the xix.iii
In Aprill are two daies, the xv and the xxi.iii
In May are thrée daies, the vii. xv. and the xx.v
In Iune are two daies, the iiii. and the vii.vi
In Iuly are two daies, the xv and the twentith.vii
In August are two daies, the xix and the xx.viii
In September are two daies, the sixt and the seauenth.ix
In October is one, the sixt day.x
In Nouember are two daies, the sixt and the nintéenth.xi
In December are thrée daies, the sixt the vii and the xi. Et alii dicunt, the xv and the xvi.xii

And who so will learne the Cani∣cular daies, which are daies of great daunger and perill, as Clarkes say, and they begin the xv. Kalend of August, and

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dureth to the fourth Nonas of Septem∣ber, which season is very perillous to take sickenesse, and it is also perillous to take drinckes or medicines, or to let bloud, but if it bée great néede, and that it must bée after the middest of the day.

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