The haven of health Chiefly gathered for the comfort of students, and consequently of all those that have a care of their health, amplified upon five words of Hippocrates, written Epid. 6. Labour, cibus, potio, somnus, Venus. Hereunto is added a preservation from the pestilence, with a short censure of the late sicknes at Oxford. By Thomas Coghan Master of Arts, and Batcheler of Physicke.

About this Item

Title
The haven of health Chiefly gathered for the comfort of students, and consequently of all those that have a care of their health, amplified upon five words of Hippocrates, written Epid. 6. Labour, cibus, potio, somnus, Venus. Hereunto is added a preservation from the pestilence, with a short censure of the late sicknes at Oxford. By Thomas Coghan Master of Arts, and Batcheler of Physicke.
Author
Cogan, Thomas, 1545?-1607.
Publication
London :: Printed by Anne Griffin, for Roger Ball, and are to be sold at his, [sic] shop without Temple-barre, at the Golden Anchor next the Nags-head Taverne,
1636.
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Subject terms
Health -- Early works to 1800.
Link to this Item
http://name.umdl.umich.edu/A19070.0001.001
Cite this Item
"The haven of health Chiefly gathered for the comfort of students, and consequently of all those that have a care of their health, amplified upon five words of Hippocrates, written Epid. 6. Labour, cibus, potio, somnus, Venus. Hereunto is added a preservation from the pestilence, with a short censure of the late sicknes at Oxford. By Thomas Coghan Master of Arts, and Batcheler of Physicke." In the digital collection Early English Books Online. https://name.umdl.umich.edu/A19070.0001.001. University of Michigan Library Digital Collections. Accessed May 22, 2025.

Pages

CHAP. 43. Of Pionie.

PIonie is of two sorts, male and female, the male is of more effect in Medicine, and is hot and dry in the second degree. The leafe, root and flowers are in use. The root being made in powder,* 1.1 and drunke in Wine, doth ease the paines of the reines and bladder. And the powder of the seeds of Pionie, being ministred in meat and drinke to children,* 1.2 doth send forth the stone beginning in them, good therefore to be used in

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youth, of such as have the stone by inheritance from their parents, by a tenure called ex vitioso semine: Or else have gotten it by purchase,* 1.3 ex intemperantia: By which two wayes the most part of diseases doe grow.

Notes

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