Natura exenterata: or Nature unbowelled by the most exquisite anatomizers of her. Wherein are contained, her choicest secrets digested into receipts, fitted for the cure of all sorts of infirmities, whether internal or external, acute or chronical, that are incident to the body of man. / Collected and preserved by several persons of quality and great experience in the art of medicine, whose names are prefixed to the book. Containing in the whole, one thousand seven hundred and twenty. Very necessary for such as regard their owne health, or that of their friends. VVhereunto are annexed, many rare, hitherto un-imparted inventions, for gentlemen, ladies and others, in the recreations of their different imployments. With an exact alphabetical table referring to the several diseases, and their proper cures.

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Title
Natura exenterata: or Nature unbowelled by the most exquisite anatomizers of her. Wherein are contained, her choicest secrets digested into receipts, fitted for the cure of all sorts of infirmities, whether internal or external, acute or chronical, that are incident to the body of man. / Collected and preserved by several persons of quality and great experience in the art of medicine, whose names are prefixed to the book. Containing in the whole, one thousand seven hundred and twenty. Very necessary for such as regard their owne health, or that of their friends. VVhereunto are annexed, many rare, hitherto un-imparted inventions, for gentlemen, ladies and others, in the recreations of their different imployments. With an exact alphabetical table referring to the several diseases, and their proper cures.
Publication
London, :: Printed for, and are to be sold by H. Twiford at his shop in Vine Court Middle Temple, G. Bedell at the Middel Temple gate Fleetstreet, and N. Ekins at the Gun neer the west-end of S. Pauls Church,
1655.
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Subject terms
Recipes -- Early works to 1800.
Medicine -- 15th-18 centuries -- Formulae, receipts, prescriptions -- Early works to 1800.
Medicine, Popular -- Early works to 1800.
Link to this Item
http://name.umdl.umich.edu/A89817.0001.001
Cite this Item
"Natura exenterata: or Nature unbowelled by the most exquisite anatomizers of her. Wherein are contained, her choicest secrets digested into receipts, fitted for the cure of all sorts of infirmities, whether internal or external, acute or chronical, that are incident to the body of man. / Collected and preserved by several persons of quality and great experience in the art of medicine, whose names are prefixed to the book. Containing in the whole, one thousand seven hundred and twenty. Very necessary for such as regard their owne health, or that of their friends. VVhereunto are annexed, many rare, hitherto un-imparted inventions, for gentlemen, ladies and others, in the recreations of their different imployments. With an exact alphabetical table referring to the several diseases, and their proper cures." In the digital collection Early English Books Online. https://name.umdl.umich.edu/A89817.0001.001. University of Michigan Library Digital Collections. Accessed June 18, 2024.

Pages

An Oyle:

TAke a pint of Oyle made of the oldest Neets-feet that you can get, of the youngest Bay leaves a handfull, a pretty quantity of the tops of Rosemary, a little quantity of Camomile, two pennyworth of Cynamon, six Cloves, a little Mace, four drops of naturall Balsom, put altogether in a Skillet, and boyl it together along space, and stir it well, and then put in your naturall Balsom, and so take it off the fire, and let it stand till it be cold, and take of the clearest of it; Probatum. Goodman Hawken of Ashill in Devonshire by himself and others.

Take a large quarter of a spoonfnll of the Oyle above written, and put it into halfe a pint of the strongest Beere you can get, beat it very well untill the Oyle be so wasted, as it appears up∣on the top of the Beer no bigger then small pins-heads, then put into it the finest flour of red Wheat that you can get, and temper it so as all the clods of the flour may be brokn, and set it on the fire, putting into it two spoonfuls of pure Honey, and let it boyl, stirring it continually, and in the boyling put to a pretty quantity of Barrows grease, let it boyl to the perfect con∣sistance of a Poultice, and apply it as hot as the Patient can en∣dure it on a linnen Cloath, first annointing the place affected with a little of the Oyle.

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