Hermetical physick: or, The right way to preserve, and to restore health. By that famous and faithfull chymist, Henry Nollius. Englished by Henry Uaughan, Gent.
About this Item
Title
Hermetical physick: or, The right way to preserve, and to restore health. By that famous and faithfull chymist, Henry Nollius. Englished by Henry Uaughan, Gent.
Author
Nolle, Heinrich, fl. 1612-1619.
Publication
London. :: Printed by Humphrey Moseley, and are to be sold at his shop, at the Princes Armes in St. Pauls Church-Yard,
1655.
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Subject terms
Medicine -- Early works to 1800.
Link to this Item
http://name.umdl.umich.edu/A89713.0001.001
Cite this Item
"Hermetical physick: or, The right way to preserve, and to restore health. By that famous and faithfull chymist, Henry Nollius. Englished by Henry Uaughan, Gent." In the digital collection Early English Books Online. https://name.umdl.umich.edu/A89713.0001.001. University of Michigan Library Digital Collections. Accessed May 25, 2025.
Pages
descriptionPage 124
Section. 7.
How the sick man should behave
himself, while he is in a course
of Physick.
I.
Let the sick person acknowledge, that
he hath deserved, and drawn upon
himselfe, the just anger of God by
his frequent sinnes: and that it is
by his righteous permission, that he
is visited with sicknesse.
II.
Let him by an unfeigned penitence,
and a godly sorrow reconcile him∣himselfe
unto God through the me∣rits
of his Saviour, putting on an
holy resolution to become a new
man; and afterwards let him
draw near to the throne of Grace,
and intreat God for mercy, and his
healing assistance.
descriptionPage 125
III.
After reconciliation and invocation
of the divine Aide, let him send
for the Physician, and Physick be∣ing
taken, let him not doubt of Gods
mercy, and his own recovery.
THat is to say, let him certainly
believe that there is communi∣cated
and infused (by the gift of
God) into the medicine which he
hath taken, such an innate vertue▪ as
is effectual and proper to expell his
Disease. If he doth this, the event
will be answerable to his faith, and
the Medicine will in all circumstan∣ces
work successfully. A firm creduli∣ty,
chearfull hope and true love and
confidence towards the Physician,
and the Medicine, (saith that great
Philosopher Oswaldus Crollius,)
conduce as much to the health of
descriptionPage 126
the Patient, yea sometimes more,
then either the remedy▪ or the Phy∣sician.
Naturall faith (I meane not
the faith of Grace which is from
Christ, but the imaginative ••aith,
which in the day that the first man
was created, was then infused and
planted in him by God the Father,
and is still communicated to his po∣sterity,)
is so powerfull, that it can
both expell and introduce Diseases:
as it manifestly appeares in times of
infection, when man by his owne
private imagination, out of meere
feare and horrour, generates a Ba∣siliscum
Coeli, which infects the
Microcosmical Firmament by means
of the Imaginants superstition ac∣cording
as the Patients faith assists,
or resists. To the faithfull all things
are possible, for faith ascertaines all
those things which are uncertaine:
God can by no meanes be reach'd
and injoy'd of us, but onely by faith:
descriptionPage 127
whosoever therefore believes in God,
he operates by the power of God,
and to God all things are possible.
But how this is performed, no hu∣mane
wit can find out: This onely
we can say, that ••aith is an operati∣on
or work not of the Bel••ever but
of him in whom he believes. Cogi∣tations
or thoughts, surpasse the o∣perations
of all Elements and Stars:
for while we imagine and believe,
such a thing shall come to passe,
that faith brings the worke about,
and without it is nothing done Our
faith that it will be so, makes us i∣magine
so: imagination excites a
Star, that Star (by conjunction with
Imagination) gives the effect or
perfect operation. To believe that
there is a medicine which can cure us,
gives the spirit of Medicine: that spi∣rit
gives the knowledge of it and the
Medicine being known, gives health.
Hence it appeares, that a true Phy∣sician,
whose operations are natural,
descriptionPage 128
is born of this faith, and the spirit
(I meane this spirit of nature, or
star of medicine,) furthers and assists
him, according to his faith. It hap∣pens
oftentimes, that an illiterate
man performes those cures by this i∣maginative
faith, which the best
Physicians cannot doe with the most
soveraigne medicines. Sometimes al∣so,
this bare perswasion or imagina∣tive
faith heales more and more ef∣fectually,
then any virtue in the ex∣hibited
Medicine, as it was manifest∣ly
found of late years, in that famous
Panacea, or All-heal of Amwaldus,
and since his time, in that new me∣dicinall
spring, which broke out
this present yeare in the Confines of
Misnia and Bohemia, to which an
incredible number of sick persons
doe daily resort. No other cause can
be rendred of these Magnalia, or
rare Physical operations, then the
firme and excessive affection of the
Patient; for the power, which work∣eth
descriptionPage 129
thus, is in the Spirit of the re∣ceiver,
when taking the medicine
without any fear or hesitation, he is
wholly possessed and inspired (as it
were) with an actual desire and be∣liefe
of health: for the rationall
soule, when stirred up, and enkind∣led
by a vehement imagination, o∣vercomes
nature, and by her own ef∣fectuall
affections, renewes many
things in her own body or mansion,
causing either health or sicknesse, and
that not onely in her own body, but
Extraneously, or in other bodies.
The efficacy of this naturall faith,
manifested it selfe in that woman
with the bloody Issue, and in the
Centurion. Hitherto are the words
of Crollius.
IV.
When the Patient is del••vered from
his disease, and restored to his for∣mer
health, let him heartily and
solemnly give all the glory to the
Supreme, All-mighty Physician:
descriptionPage 130
let him offer the sacrifice of
Thankes-giving, and acknowledge
the goodness and the tender mercies
of the Lord. And let not the Phy∣sitian
forget to performe his duty,
by a thankeful and solemn acknow∣ledgement
of Gods gracious con∣cessions,
by choosing and enabling
him to be his unworthy instrument
to restore the sick. And this he
must do, not onely because it is his
duty, and a most deserved and ob∣liged
gratitude, but also out of a
wise Christian caution, to avoid
those judgements which are poured
upon the negligent and ungratefull,
by the most just jealousie of the ir∣resistible
and everlasting GOD;
unto whom alone be rendred by An∣gels
and Men, and by all his crea∣tures,
All Praise and Glory, and
perpetual thanks in this the Tem∣porall,
and in the eternall Being.
Amen.
FINIS.
descriptionPage [unnumbered]
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