The art of preserving and restoring health explaining the nature and causes of the distempers that afflict mankind : also shewing that every man is, or may be his own best physician : to which is added a treatise of the most simple and effectual remedies for the diseases of men and women / written in French by M. Flamand ; and faithfully translated into English.

About this Item

Title
The art of preserving and restoring health explaining the nature and causes of the distempers that afflict mankind : also shewing that every man is, or may be his own best physician : to which is added a treatise of the most simple and effectual remedies for the diseases of men and women / written in French by M. Flamand ; and faithfully translated into English.
Author
Flamant, M., fl. 1692-1699.
Publication
London :: Printed by R. Bently, H. Bonwick, and S. Manship,
1697.
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Subject terms
Medicine -- Early works to 1800.
Health.
Cite this Item
"The art of preserving and restoring health explaining the nature and causes of the distempers that afflict mankind : also shewing that every man is, or may be his own best physician : to which is added a treatise of the most simple and effectual remedies for the diseases of men and women / written in French by M. Flamand ; and faithfully translated into English." In the digital collection Early English Books Online. https://name.umdl.umich.edu/A39637.0001.001. University of Michigan Library Digital Collections. Accessed May 7, 2024.

Pages

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THE PREFACE.

WHen I form'd the De∣sign of publishing the preceding Treatise, I did not intend to have added a Colle∣ction of particular Remedies, because I look'd upon that as a Subject that had been suffici∣ently handl'd, and even almost wholly exhausted by so many Authors who have compos'd en∣tire Volumes of this Nature. But since I have been desir'd by several Persons whom I wou'd not willingly disoblige, to com∣pleat

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my Ʋndertaking by sub∣joining an account of such Re∣medies as I had observ'd to be most esteem'd, and found to be most useful and effectual, I cou'd not deny 'em so small a Favour. And that I might render my Performance in this kind more serviceable to the Public, I thought fit to add some short Reflexions, according to the variety of the Subject.

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