The eight sections of Hippocrates Aphorismes review'd and rendred into English, according to the translation of Anutius Foesius ; digested into an exact and methodical form and divided into several convenient distinctions, and every distinction into several chapters, wherein every aphorisme is reduced to its proper subject, whereby the reader may find out any desired aphorisme without the tedious revolution of the whole work ; wherein also many aphorismes are significantly interpreted which were neglected in the former translation.

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Title
The eight sections of Hippocrates Aphorismes review'd and rendred into English, according to the translation of Anutius Foesius ; digested into an exact and methodical form and divided into several convenient distinctions, and every distinction into several chapters, wherein every aphorisme is reduced to its proper subject, whereby the reader may find out any desired aphorisme without the tedious revolution of the whole work ; wherein also many aphorismes are significantly interpreted which were neglected in the former translation.
Author
Hippocrates.
Publication
London :: Printed by W.G. for Rob. Crofts ...,
1665.
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Subject terms
Hippocrates.
Medicine -- Aphorisms.
Medicine, Greek and Roman.
Link to this Item
http://name.umdl.umich.edu/A43860.0001.001
Cite this Item
"The eight sections of Hippocrates Aphorismes review'd and rendred into English, according to the translation of Anutius Foesius ; digested into an exact and methodical form and divided into several convenient distinctions, and every distinction into several chapters, wherein every aphorisme is reduced to its proper subject, whereby the reader may find out any desired aphorisme without the tedious revolution of the whole work ; wherein also many aphorismes are significantly interpreted which were neglected in the former translation." In the digital collection Early English Books Online. https://name.umdl.umich.edu/A43860.0001.001. University of Michigan Library Digital Collections. Accessed June 14, 2024.

Pages

CHAP. XXX. Of the affects of the Stomach.

Sect. 1. Aph. 15.

IN the winter and spring our stomachs are most hot, and our sleeps most long, therefore in those seasons our meals ought to be more plen∣tiful, because when there is most natural heat our bodies need more plentiful nutriment, which Ages, and Wrestlers signifie unto us.

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Sect. 2. Aph. 21.

A draught of Wine takes away hunger.

Sect. 4. Aph. 65.

A vehement heat of the Stomach, and a gnaw∣ing of the mouth of the stomach in Feavers, is naught.

Sect. 6. Aph. 7.

Pains of the Stomach, which are in the upper part thereof, are more light, and not so vehe∣ment as those which are in the lower part thereof.

Sect. 6. Aph. 18.

It is mortal, if the bladder, brain, heart, midriffe, any thin intestine or bowel, the sto∣mach or liver be peirced or divided.

Sect. 7. Aph. 54.

When Phlegm is included between the mid∣riffe and the stomach, if it cause pain, and have no passage either way, if it be turned into the bladder by the veins, the Diseases are dis∣solved.

Sect. 7. Aph. 6.

Abhorring of meat and sincere dejections in a continual Feaver, fortell ill.

Sect. 8. Aph. 18.

When the vital spirits above the navil ascend above the Diaphragma, all the humour is burnt up then death is come. But when the lungs and heart, having lost their radical moisture, the heat being gathered together into mortiferous places, breath forth the spirits of heat altogether. More∣over partly by the flesh, partly by the pores of the head, by which we say we live, the Soul leave

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the Cottage of the body, yeilds up this cold and mortal Effigies, together with the choler, blood, flegm and flesh.

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