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.
- 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
-
https://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 May 18, 2024.
Contents
- title page
- frontispiece
- to the reader
- author to the reader
- list of recipe testers
-
Selected Experiments in Physick and Chirurgery.
- A Soveraign Plaister for the Plurisie.
- A Plaister for the heat in the back.
- For the same.
- An Oyntment for an ach in the back.
- An excellent Oyntment for an ache and shrinking of Sinewes.
- An excellent Oyntment for an ache, or for shrink∣ing of Sinewes; and for the Gout.
- An Oyntment for the Gout, and all cold cases.
- A good Salve for any kind of old Sore.
-
A good Salve for Bruises and Wounds, called,
Gratia Dei. - An Oyntment for Aches, or other griefs, and all other cold causes.
-
To make the green Oyntment, by
Wilsons wife of London, - A good Oyntment for all kind of Bruises.
- To make the black Plaister which is good for the Gout, and all other Aches coming of cold causes.
- A Salve for a Cut or other Wound.
- An Oyntment for the Ache in the arme, or any o∣ther place that cometh of cold, or by the Rheume.
- A Plaister for the pricking of a nail.
- An Oyntment for a Bruise with a fall.
- A Plaister for a Thorn or splinter.
- A Salve for any rankled sore.
- An excellent salve for any Wound.
- A Powder to stanch bleeding Wounds.
- For the same, or for ones Nose bleeding:
- Another, by the same Author.
- A Salve for any Sore.
- A Salve for the Piles, or Emrods.
- Another for the same.
- Another for the same.
- Another for the same.
- Another for the same.
- Another for the same.
- Another for the same.
- Another for the same.
- Another.
- Another.
- Another.
- Another.
-
To make Unguentum mundificatum. - A plaister for the head ach.
- An ointment for the ach in the bones.
- An ointment for rednesse of the face.
- Another.
- An ointment for heat in the back.
- Another for the same.
- An ointment to refresh, coole, and strengthen the back.
- A plaister for a Felon or an Ancombe.
- An approved salve for a Felon.
- Another.
- Another.
- Another.
- Another.
- Another.
- Another.
- Another.
- Another.
- Another.
- An approved ointment for a wrench, bruise or burning.
- An approved ointment for a scalding or burning.
- An ointment to asswage burning, swelling and aking of any sore.
- For the same.
- An ointment for a ring▪worm.
- For the same.
- Another.
- Another.
- Another.
- For a Cancer in the Head and Joynt.
- For the Cancer in a Womans Pap.
- Plaisters to take away Corns, or Angnailes.
- Another.
- Another.
- A Plaister for the Pluresie.
- For a Stitch or Pluresie.
- Another.
-
An Oyntment for a scald, by Mistresse
Downing. -
A speciall Oyntment for burning or scalding, by Mrs.
Downing. - Plaisters to take out the fire of burning or scalding.
- Another.
- Another.
- For the same.
- Another▪
- Another for the same.
-
For the same, by Mrs.
Limsey. - A Plaister for a swelling like a Wen.
-
A salve or Plaister to stanch Blood, by Mrs.
Skudamore. - A salve to knit sinews or Veins.
- An Oyntment to kill Itch.
- An Oyntment for all manner of Aches.
- A Plaister for aking of Bones.
- A Plaister for the rising of the Mother.
- An Oyntment to heal a Burning that it shall not be seen.
- Divers Plaisters and Oyntments for a white Scurf.
- An Oyntment to make a man's visage white.
- An Oyntment for a sore Leg:
-
A Plaister for any kinde of swelling. -
A Plaister for the Kings Evil. - An Oyntment for ones face that seems Leprous.
- An Oyntment for sauce▪flegm in ones face that riseth with pimples.
-
A Plaister to draw out a thorn or a stub: -
A red salve for old sore Legs▪ - An Oyntment for a Canker-pock.
- An Oyntment for the Piles or Emrods.
- Another for the same.
-
A Plaister to defend, that no wicked Matter draw to a Wound. - An Intret to open, heal and cleanse a Wound, to take away the ache, and to fret away dead and cankred flesh.
-
An Oyntment for the Gout, by Mr.
Peacock. - A Plaister for a scald Head.
- Another.
- Another.
- A Plaister to break a sore Brest.
- To keep a Brest from breaking, if it be not too far gone.
- A black salve that cureth all old sores and Ʋlcers, be they never so foul and stinking.
- For a saucy face, an Ointment.
- A Plaister for Pimples in the face.
-
Another, by Mr.
Holdich. -
A Poultesse made Plaister-wise to asswage swelling, and put away the ache, wheresoever it be. - For Women that have sore Paps.
- Swelling of Brests.
- Idem.
- An Oyntment to take away the rednesse of the face.
- An Oyntment to kill Worms.
-
A Plaister for the same. - An Oyntment for sauce flegme in the face.
- Another for the same.
- An Oyntment for all manner of sicknesse in the Head
- To make a Plaister for a Marmole.
- Another for the same.
- Divers Plaisters for a Thorn or Shiver.
- How to make an excellent Plaister to break an Impo∣sthume.
- A Plaister for an Adder or Snake.
- Divers Plaisters good for the biting of a mad Dog, or a∣ny other venemous Beast.
- For stinging of a Wasp.
- A Plaister for the Spleen, being hard and windy:
- A Plaister for the Spleene.
- A Quilt or Plaister for the stomack.
- For the same.
- Another.
- For a Stitch.
-
A Lotion for the heat in the Liver, or in the Stomack: -
A good Oyntment to comfort a weak stomack, and cold, that cannot digest well. - A Quilt for the heat of the Liver.
-
A Plaister for a stitch. -
A Fomentation for the swelling of the spleen or the stitch in the side: -
A Quilt for the stomack: -
A good Plaister for the Dropsie: -
A Plaister for the lightnesse in the head; that cometh by great heat or sicknesse:
Mrs. Downing. -
A Plaister to make one sleep. - A Plaister for the Megrim.
- An Oyntment for a stroak in ones Eye.
- An Oyntment for a mote in ones Eye.
- A Plaister to break wind in the body.
- An Oyle or Oyntment for sore eyes having a Pin or Web.
-
A Plaister for the same.
Eadem. - A Plaister to make one sleep.
- Another for the same.
- An Oyle for a Ringworm.
- An Oyntment for sorenesse and swelling in the face.
- A good Oyntment for the eyes.
- Another for the Pin and Web in the eyes.
- A Plaister for one that cannot make water.
- A Plaister for the Collick or Stitch.
- Another for the same.
- For the paine and heat in the back, Linimentum.
- A Plaister for the paine and weaknesse in the back.
- For swelling in the cod.
- A Salve to skin a sore leg.
- A Cearcloth for the swelling of the leg or any other place,
- An ointment to make hair grow.
-
A Plaister for the Stone. - To heale a wound without plaister.
- For any wound or sore. Idem.
- A Salve for all manner of Sores.
- To purge or cleanse any wound of dead flesh and corruption.
-
A good powder for dead flesh, and to dry up every old sore and wound.
Idem. -
An Ointment for griefe of joints, and old running sores, that have been issues and old wounds.
Idem. -
A good Ointment for the Palsey.
Idem. - A Plaister to kill the worm in a sore leg &c.
- To asswage the swelling that cometh of an Ague in the leggs, or any other place.
- A Plaister for a Felon.
- An Ointment for an Ach, Rheum or swelling in the joints, made with swallows.
- A Pultesse to allay a swelling.
- Another for the same.
- To make the black Plaister for the Gout, to draw out all evil humors from any part of the body, very good to amend the sight, and paine in the head, to break an Imposthume and to amend the hearing.
- The use thereof.
- An Ointment for any sore.
- A Poultesse for any swelled sore.
- An excellent healing Salve.
- An Ointment for any sore which hath dead flesh or any corruption within, and to take away the rednesse and pimples of the face:
- An approved Salve to heale a corrupted sore.
- To make a black Salve.
- To make the green Ointment.
- For a Scald Head.
- A Cataplasm Pultesse, or Defensative to defend and draw humors from any Sore.
- To make Diacytony, which they call Clear Cakes.
- For clearing the Blood.
- For the Jaundies.
- For weaknesse in the back.
- For China Broth.
- Another about China Broth.
- For the Gargle.
- To make the juice of Licoras.
- To make Almond Milk
- Sundry Waters for several Uses.
-
Divers and sundry WATERS for sore Eyes, as followeth.
- A Water to be made in the beginning of May.
- Another Water for the same, to be made at all times:
- A speciall approved Water for the healing of sore Eyes.
- Another for the same.
-
A Water for a sore Mouth, by Mrs.
Downing. -
To make a Water for a sore mouth, by Mr.
Peterson. - A Water to destroy the heat of the palms of the hands, and of the soles of the feet.
- A Water to destroy the heat of the Face.
- A Water for bleard Eyes.
-
A good Water for the Eyes, by Mrs.
Skudamore. -
A precious Water for the Eyes, by my Lady
Heyden. -
A Water for the Stone, by Mrs.
Parnel Dall inSmith-field. -
A Water for the heat in the Back, by my Lady of
Sussex. -
A Water for them that be lunatick in the Head, by Mr.
Edwards. - A Water for the swelling of ones Leg after an Ague.
-
To make
WOUND-WATER. - An excellent water for any wound or cut.
- A good Water for the Collick and the Stone.
- A preservative water against the stone.
- A water to wash a red face.
- A water against the itch and scab.
- Another for the same.
- A water for a ring-worm.
- Divers approved medicines and waters for eyes
- To make a blue water, being excellent to root out, and rot away dead flesh in a sore leg.
-
To make good red water for any old wound or sore leg. My Lady
Pagets water. - A special good water for red bleared eyes.
- A good Water to asswage the great thirst in a Feaver.
- A Water for the Itch.
- Idem.
- A good Water to wash and heal a Marmole.
- A Water for the evil in the throat or mouth
- A Water for the Stone.
- An approved good Water to draw water out of the Stomack.
- A good water to wash all manner of sores, risings and swellings.
-
A most Soveraigne Water, that Dr.
STEVENS the Physician kept secret unto his death. - The Vertues of divers Waters, as followeth.
- To make Aqua Composita.
- To make a fine Damask Water.
- Another Damask Water.
-
How to make another Damask Water, proved by her that distilleth the Sweet Waters at
Hampton Court. - To make Rose Water.
- To make Damask Water in winter.
- A Water for a Tetter or a Ringworm.
-
The making of white Water for the eyes.
Mr. Birch his Water. - A special good Water for the Web or Pearle in ones Eye.
- To make Balm Water.
- A very good Medicine for sore eyes.
- A medicine to bee used for the Pox in the Throat.
- To keep the Pox from pitting in the face when they are come out, and begin to die.
-
A black Salve and a powder, to heale any old Sore or Ʋlcer where the bone is not corrupt. -
The Powder.
Idem. - An ointment for all wounds of what kind soever, so they be new and greene.
- A medicine for a Wound.
- The Diet.
- A medicine for the pricking of a sinew.
- A medicine for the strangurie.
- For any bruise or rednesse in the eyes.
- To make an excellent Perfume.
- A purge for the head and stomack.
- For the head and stomack Rheume.
- A cooling drink.
- For a splent of a horse.
- To stanch blood.
- A medicine truly approved for the Stone.
- The use of it.
- Divers good Medicines to stanch the bleeding of a wound.
- Another for the same.
- Another to stanch the bleeding at the Nose, or of a wound.
- Another for the bleeding of a wound.
- To stanch bleeding.
- Another to stanch it.
- To stanch bloud of a vein or wound.
- Another for the same.
- A black Salve, very good for any green or old cut or wound.
- A medicine for the tooth ach.
- For a child that hath a Cough.
- An excellent medicine or oyntment for any bruise, straine or pains in the joynts.
- For the falling sicknesse.
- For the dropsie.
-
To purge the head and helpe concoction in the stomack.
John Ferne∣lius his Pills. - To cure a galled horse.
-
Doctor
Rowlands water for all manner of sores of the eyes whatsoever. - A plaister to strengthen ones stomack.
- For the falling sicknesse.
- For the trembling of the heart.
- Pills for the running of the reins.
- To make the face fair.
- To cure Poisoning.
- For the Wormes.
- For a Pin or Web in the Eye.
- For a Canker.
- For an old or green Wound.
- For the Yellow Jaundies.
-
A most Soveraign Water, which hath all the ver∣tues of
Venice Treacle or Mithridate, and far surpasseth them. - Against the Inflamation of the Cods, or Falls, or Bruises.
- For sore Eyes.
- Another.
- To stay a loosenesse.
- For the Tooth ache.
- For a Tooth that is rotten and aketh:
- For the Stone.
- For the Falling sicknesse.
- For the wind in the Stomack.
- An approved Medicine for a Stitch.
- To take away a Corn.
- Another for the same paine, if it comes by a Plu∣risie.
- To make Viper-Wine.
- An excellent Purge.
- To bind the humors, heal the defects in the rains, and expel wind.
- A gentle Purge to purge the stomack of viscous hu∣mors:
- To cure any sore, (if the bone be not defective,) swelling or paine.
- For the Stone, or to make one make Water.
- For a Consumption.
- For the Gout.
- For the Dead Palsie.
- For the Tooth ache.
- For the Stone.
- To stanch bleeding.
- For the Stone:
- To cure the grating of the Stone in the Ʋ∣reters, or the Yard.
- For an Ague.
- A Medicine for the sorenesse of any Leg.
- The Plaister for the same.
- A very good Salve for a green wound.
- A Plaister to heal all manner of biles, sores, or swelling of Legs.
- For the same.
- Another.
- An Oyntment to heale Scabs, Blisters and Pushes upon the Legs.
- For the Plague or Pestilence.
- A Medicine for the plague. Mrs. Limsey.
- Another.
- To gather and ripen a sore or bruise.
- Idem.
- An ointment to break a sore.
- A salve to heal the sore.
- To heal a cut or wound.
- Idem.
- Idem.
- Tents for Wounds.
- To keep a wound clean.
- A Syrrup for wounded folks.
- For a cut either of Sinnew or Vein.
- To make a green Salve.
- For to make the Oyntment for the same.
- How you shall use a Fraction, otherwise called a broken bone.
- For a mans Ribs that be broken.
- A Drink to knit these Fractions.
- For all manner of aches that come of colds, or bruises that fall down into any place by means of an Ague.
- A ready Remedy for any wound or cut, o∣therwise called Wound-water.
- To stanch a Wound that bleeds excessively.
- For pricking of a Thorn or Nail.
- For a Felon.
- To make a Plaister for a man or woman that hath a weak stomack, and cannot digest.
- A Medicine for a Scald head.
-
To distil Waters truly, taken out of Mrs.
Dawsons Book.- Primroses
- Fennel.
- Hysop.
- Camomile.
- Walwort.
- Strawberries.
- Mulberries.
- Wormwood:
- Celendine.
- Fumetory.
- To distil Damask Water.
- A Water to take out the Sawce or Flegme out of the face of a Man or Woman.
- To make a Water called Maids-milk, good for the Canker and saucy Flegm.
- To make a red water that is precious for all manner of sores.
- A water for divers sores.
- An Intret that will heale any wound that is green; the intret must be powred into the wound blood warme. Try it with a Cocks head.
- Ointments to cleanse wounds, and heale and recover the flesh.
- Ad vermes excutiendos de quocunque ulco vel vulnere.
- Ad probandum utrum caro in ulcere sit mortua vel non.
- For a bruise or straine.
- To make conserve of rhadish roots.
- Conserve of Cherries.
- Orange parings.
- To make marmalade.
- For deafenesse.
- For any Ʋlcer.
-
A medicine to heale all Aches, except the Gout; and it will ease the paine thereof, coming of any cold.
Mrs. Dinne of Heydon. - A Medicine for the Rheume to drink dayly, or when you will.
- The receipt of the green oyntment; good for Stitches and Aches.
- For a Stitch.
- To make a Pompillion which is good for all manner of Aches.
- The Black Salve.
- For the Canker, never so great.
- For the stinging of a venemous beast, or biting of a mad dogge.
- For the black Jaundies.
- An excellent good Balme.
- For the worms.
- For a pin and web.
- A Gargle for the throat.
- To make oyle of Worms, which is good against wrinches and shrinking of sinnews.
- For the Frenzy.
- For Tetters.
- A Medicine to lay to the wrist for the Ague.
- For the Canker.
- To heal or cleanse any old or new wound or sore.
- For sinnews that be shrunk.
- To make a common Glister.
- To stanch blood.
- To cure the bloody flux.
- For them that pisse blood.
- To make one sleep.
- For the same.
- For the same.
- A Water for the eyes.
- For the same: proved.
- A water for a running Canker.
- To make a purgation for a dog.
-
Mr. Docter
Coldwell his medicine for the dropsie. Approved. - A medicine for the Cough.
- To make a Tysand for them that be stopped in the stomack.
- An approved Medicine for a swelling.
- To stanch bleeding of a wound.
- A medicine for the heate of the eyes.
- A medicine for the plurisie.
- A medicine to stanch blood.
- For the same.
- For a Canker or an old sore.
- A medicine for the Ptisick of the Lungs.
- A Medicine for wind or hurling in the head, or an Impostume.
- An excellent Plaister for all manner of aches, for as soon as the Plaister is on, the ache is gone.
- A Vomit for short breath, or stopping in the Brest.
- A Medicine for the Collick passion.
- A Medicine for the Bloody-Flux.
- A Medicine for faintnesse of the heart or swounding.
- To stay Vomiting.
- A Medicine for the Falling Evil.
- A Medicine for a sudden swelling or strain.
- The Kings Medicine for the Plague.
- For the Mother.
- To make one sleep.
- For a shaking Ague.
- A Medicine to stop a Lack.
- A Water for a sore mouth, or any other Sores.
- A Medicine for the Morphew in ones face.
- A Medicine against Melancholy.
- To make a Derge for the Lungs.
- For bleeding at the Nose.
- For the Flux.
- For the Morphew.
- A Fume for the Head, to be applied to the Ear.
- Another Fume of Vineger, to be applyed at the Nose.
- Another Fume to be taken at the Nose.
- An excellent Mellilote Plaister for hard swel∣lings or to cure sores.
- To make Oyle of Hemp, good to drive out the Ague from any outward part of the body.
- To make Oyle of Swallowes, good for all manner of Aches.
- An approved Medicine for a sore brest, or an Ague sore, that will both draw and heal.
- A Soveraign Water for an old Sore.
-
A Soveragn
Remedy to draw out a thorn, or for an old sore, the Gout or Siatica. - An Oyntment good for Aches, Bruises, Stiches, Cricks, Gouts and lameness, and starkness of sinewes.
- For a green Wound or cut.
- To make Oyle of Exceter.
- To make Swallowes Oyntment.
- To make a green Salve to heal any sore.
- A precious Salve for a sore, wound or malady.
- An Oyntment for one that hath a bruise from a horse.
- A perfect way to cool and help the liver, and to take away the pain of the heart-burning.
- To make an excellent good Water for many Diseases.
- For the Stone.
- To make Balm Water of the best.
- A Water for the Plague.
- For a prick with a thorn.
- For the swelling to take it away.
- To make a Balm, which will heal a green Wound within four and twenty hours.
- For burning or scalding.
- For the biting of a mad Dog.
- For the biting of a Hound or Dog.
- For the cutting of Sinews or Veins.
- To stanch the strong bleeding at the Nose.
- To make a Water to help Sheep, though they be infected.
- An approved Medicine for the Stone.
- The use of taking the Water.
- For uncurable aches, and pains in the Joints.
- For falling or bruising a mans body.
- For the Palsie.
-
For the Ach in the huckle bone, called the Sia
ica. - To take the Ague out of any sore.
- An approved Medicine for the bloody Flux.
- To make Oyl of Cream for burning or scalding.
- To make Aqua Mirabilis & pretiosa.
- To make Rosa Solis Water.
- To make Aquavitae.
- For all manner of bruises, swellings and broken bones.
- A Drink good for Bruising.
- Against Burning.
- Another.
- An Oyntment for burning with Gun-powder, or scalding.
- An excellent Receipt to make Wormwood-water.
- In the curing of a wound five things are to be observed or noted.
- A potion to stanch blood.
- To stanch blood outwardly.
- Another way to stanch blood.
- To break the Plague sore.
- An excellent medicine for a Plague sore.
-
To make King
Edward the third his Pomander against the plague. - To draw the sore of the plague.
- For the Plurisie.
- A good medicine to bring forth the smal Pocks, Meazels or purples
- For him that cannot hold urine.
- To take away the spots of the smal Pocks.
- For the Quinsie in the throat.
- To purge the reins.
- To destroy a ringworm.
- Another for the same.
- Against the Rheum in the Head.
- An excellent Medicine for Sinews that be shrunk.
- For a cold Stomack.
- For the Winde in the bottom of the Stomack.
- Good for the Stomack.
- A Medicine for a Stitch.
- To asswage a sting or present swelling.
- A Medicine not onely to cure or break the Stone, but also to purge the same, that you shall never be pained with the same again, if you use the same daily.
- To cause one to sleep.
- Another.
- For a Strein.
- A salve for wounds and sores to draw, cleanse and heal wounds of sinnews, joynts, impost humes, Cankers, and to draw out a thorn or Iron.
- For cooling of a sore.
- For scabs, itch, and wormes.
- For wambling of the stomack.
- A good powder for the strmack.
-
An excellent Se
recloth. - An excellent medicine for the Stone.
- For the Stone in the reins or bladder.
- For swelling about the fingers or nails, or the joynts.
- For a sore Throat.
- To draw out a thorn.
- To fasten the teeth, and cleanse them.
- To cleanse the Teeth.
- For the Tooth ach.
- To pluck out a tooth.
- To make a Tooth fall out without paine.
- Another to cleanse the teeth.
- Another.
- To cease vomiting.
- A powder for the Collick and Stone.
- To make a Searcloth.
- To make Rosemary water.
- To make Cinamon water.
-
To make Irish
Aqua vitae. - For the clearnesse of the sight of the eyes.
- A medicine for an Ach or sinnew that is shrunk▪
- For an Ancombe.
- For the pain or heat in the eyes:
- To make the smal Pocks come forth.
- An excellent powder against the worms.
- To clear the voice.
- To make vineger.
- A Water to digest melancholy.
- To cleanse blood.
- A water to coole the liver.
- For all manner of Worms.
- For Worms.
- For a wound that is healed above, and sore underneath.
- To bring wounds that rankle, into good temper, and to cease the burning and aking.
- An hasty healer of wounds.
- To make a drink that healeth all wounds, without plaister or ointment.
- To stanch the bleeding of a wound.
- To take away warts.
- For an Angnaile.
- To make Wormwood water.
- To kill childrens wormes.
- To make clarret water.
- To draw a bullet out of a wound.
- To restore wine that is sowre.
- To joyne cut sinnews.
- For a Stitch in the side and stomack.
- An excellent medicine for the run∣ing of the reines.
- To kill any Canker.
- For the Scurvy.
- Ʋnguentum album Camphoratum.
- The Black Oyntment.
- For a Bruise.
- A Water for a sore mouth or a Fistula.
- To help a mans Members that do swell.
- To make a red Plaister; that will dry up a Wound and soder flesh together.
- For the clearness of the eye-sight.
- Another.
- A Medicine for the swelling of the eyes that cometh of cold, and for bleared eys, and for clearing the eye-sight.
- A good Plaister and Medicine for an ache, and to draw out bruised blood, and for all manner of griefs.
- A Medicine for a child that is scalded with its own wa∣ter, or for a womans brest that is curdled.
- To make Oyl of Camomile.
- To make Oyl of Bay.
- A very good and gentle Glister.
- A Water very good and comfortable for a cold sto∣mack▪
- To make a Woman that hath a dead child within, imme∣diately to be delivered.
- For the swelling of the Cods.
- To help a stinking breath that cometh from the stomack.
- Ʋnguentum de Althaea.
- Ʋnguentum Aureum.
- The Egyptian Oyntment.
- An approved distilled Water against Deafnesse.
- An excellent Plaister to splint a broken Leg or Arm.
- A most excellent Confection which is very good for many inward Diseases, especially for all Fluxes of Blood, from whence soever they flow; also for them which have great pain in their Backs and Liver.
- An excellent Oyl of Balm.
-
Gallens cold Cerret. - Ceretum Santalinum.
- A Powder for a cold stomack, which ex∣pelleth all pains.
- An Ointment for the stomack.
- For an Ague.
- For a Felon.
- For a Rupture.
- A poultesse for a Rupture.
- For aches and swellings in the Knees coming of cold.
- For Aches in your Legs, Arms and Shoulders.
- Against all Agues.
- To purge the Back, and to cleanse the Reins.
- For the heat of the Back.
- To cool and strengthen the Back.
- For Biles, Felons or Ancoms.
- To keep a Brest from breaking, if it be not too far gone.
- To break sore Brests.
- To heat a Brest when it is broken.
- For a Cough.
- For a Canker in a Womans Brest.
- For a Canker in the mouth.
- To kill a Canker in the body.
- For a Canker in the Hands or Joints.
- For the Dropsie.
- For the Pin and Web in the Eye.
- For a stripe or rednesse in the Eyes.
- To destroy Earwigs in a mans Ear.
- To cure the Emrods.
- For the Bloody Flux.
- For the going out of the Fundament.
- To cure a Fellon.
- For Defluctions in the Eyes.
- For a stie in the Eye.
- For sore Eyes that have a skin grown over the light.
- For the going out of the Fundament.
- For the swelling of the Fundament.
- For the Falling Sicknesse.
- For the Fistula.
- To purge and cut Flegm.
- For spots in the Face.
- For a Fistula.
- For the running of the Reins.
- For the Siatica.
- For the noise in the head.
- For the ring-worm in the head.
- For the giddinesse in the head.
- To kill lice in the head.
- For the heart.
- For the trembling of the heart.
- For the paine of the Emrods.
- To stop the Emrods.
- To dissolve any hardness.
- Against the yellow Jaundies.
- For the black Jaundies.
- To ripen an Imposthume.
- To stop the Lask.
- For the Morphew.
- For the Mother.
- For a sore mouth.
- For stubbing with a rusty nail.
- Fo the pricking of a Needle in a Joynt, the hole being stopped.
- For pricking in a sinew, with a needle or knife.
- To draw out a Nail or Thorn.
- The first Salve of Tobacco.
- The second Salve of Tobacco.
- The Vertue.
- The Balm of Tobacco.
- A Turgation for the Back.
- To make compound Oximel.
- An Oyntment to be made in May, which is good for the stiffnesse of the Joints and shrinking up of Sinewes, for the pain in the Back, the stitch in the side, for the stopping of the Liver and Spleen, or Ague fallen in a∣ny part of the Flesh, if it be taken before it grow to an Imposthume, for bruising and knots: it will also take away swelling and blackness.
- Oyle of Mastick.
- To make Oyl of Roses.
- Oyle of Almonds.
- Oyl of Camomile.
- To make Oyl of Eggs.
- To make Oyl of Roses without Oyl Olive.
- To make Oyl of Wheat.
- To make Oyl of Anniseeds.
- To make Oyle of Tartary.
- A Plaister to draw out broken bones out of any part of the body.
- For the Palsie.
- For the lameness in the side coming of the Palsie.
- A Medicine for the Palsie, that taketh away the speech.
- A Preservative for the Plague.
- A Medicine for the Rhume.
- To take away pimples out of the face.
- A purgation for flegme.
- A very good salve for a sore, cut, or boile.
-
The Composition of the most precious oile called
Oleum Magistrale. -
The manner to apply the same Oile according to the quality or dis∣ease, doth consist in these things following; to the patient, to the
ound or disease, and to the diseased part. - A preparative to the said Oyle.
- The time of dressing a wound.
- The difference of the diseases.
- The use of the implaister that is to be applied with the Oyl upon the diseased partie.
- Before you have throughly healed the wound, take this Experiment following.
- A secret unknown for the purifying of, and clean∣sing the skin of the face, or other parts of the body, distilled and approved.
- To take spots out of the face.
- To purge flegm.
- An easie and general purge.
- A Syrup for the Lungs and Cough.
- To make oyle of Vitriol.
- A Balsome to cure wounds.
- To make your Lute.
- Christ his Balme to cure wounds.
- To make oyl of Tartar another way.
- A precious balme to cure wounds speedily.
- A water for the shaking palsie.
-
A special Balsome to cure Cankers, Fistulaes, Leprosies and the disease called
Noli me tangere, by dressing it twice a day with this oyl, it healeth a Carbuncle or boil, being put into the wound, it bringeth out broken bones, and cureth ruptures. - The blessed balme or water for wounds.
- An excellent water for the Rheume.
-
To make Aqua realis. - A very good drink to scowr the reins, and to cause one to make water.
-
Another
Aqua realis for the Morphew. - A singular medecine for the dimme and skinny eies, and for the pin and web therein.
- A Medicine for the Tooth ach.
- An oyntment for an ach or swelling between the joints or other place.
- An ointment to take away heat and blisters, and bladders of the smal pocks: take it in time.
-
A singular potion for the gravel and stone, proved and found excellent. - A medicine for the flux, and loosenesse of the belly.
- A special oyntment for the Itch.
- For a Stitch.
- A water to procure sleep.
- A very good Poultesse.
- A medicine for the Quinsey.
- To make a tooth fall out.
- A speciall water against the Stone in the reins or bladder.
- To cure a Fistula.
- To cure a Felon.
- A good Salve for many sores.
- To cure an Ach.
- To cure a sore mouth.
- A Searcloth for old wounds.
- A salve for a wound that festers inwardly.
- A Poultesse to break a boil or bunch.
- A very good Salve for a wound or sore, it also easeth the Gout.
- A Medicine for one that bleedeth inwardly.
- An outward Medicine for Wormes.
- To cure the Cramp.
- The Water of Saint Johns wort.
- An excellent Salve for an old Sore.
- To take away dead flesh quickly.
-
A good Water for a sore mouth or thr
at. - To heal Ringworms, Cornes, and sores of the feet.
- A special Medicine for the Emrods.
- A very good Medicine for an Ague.
- A Medicine for the Siatica, or any ache.
- An excellent Salve made of Soap.
- A Plaister for any Siatica, Gout, or Ache in the body, Limbs or Joints.
- A Water for sore eyes that are cut or hurt.
- An Oyle for any Gout, Siatica or Ache.
- A Remedy against the Plurisie.
- For a Woman that hath a sore∣nesse under her side.
- For the Megrim▪ Imposthume, Dropsie and Feaver in the Head, and for all manner of Aches in the Head.
- For the Yellow Jaundies.
- To break a Carbunkle, and all other Botches beside.
- A Water for a sore mouth, and to wash a wound.
- An Oyntment for a Tetter:
- For a swelling in the Neck.
- For swelling of a veine.
- For a pain in the Yard, and swelling thereof.
- To take away Venom and Poison out of a Wound, made by some poisoned Arrow, or other Instrument.
- An Oyntment for aches in men or womens backs, or any other place.
-
To make
Emplaistrum Aureum, for all manner of Wounds. - A Medicine for the Head-ach, and to cause one to sleep.
- The skinning Water that destroieth Tetters, the Serpigo, and such other Diseases, in any part of the body.
- The Congealer.
- The use of the Waters.
- A Powder for a Fistulae.
- The use of it in the time of the Cure.
-
Lucatella his Balsom▪ - An excellent Plaister to conglutinate a Wound.
- For a Rupture in a Child.
- An excellent Salve for Wounds.
- To destroy Rats and Mice.
-
For a Rupture in a Child or man, from Mrs.
Eliz. Cha∣non ofOystherg, Probatum. - The Plaister to the Poultice.
- The Powder to be given inwardly.
-
A Medicine
pproved for the redness of the Eyes. - A Dyet drink for the Spleen.
- The Cramp water.
- An approved Medicine for the Scurvey.
- An approved Medicine for Convulsion fits.
- For a woman with Child.
- For the Worms in Children,
- For a Rupture.
- An Oyle:
- For Swelling and Aking of Knees.
- To make Oyle of Elder-flowers
- For the heat in an Ague.
- For an Ach.
- A wonderfull Plaister for Soar Breasts.
- To dry the milk of a womans Breasts.
- A Medicine for a man that is burned with a Harlot.
- For a man that pisseth blood.
- For a stinking breath.
- For a Child that is broken.
- For to stanch bleeding.
- To stanch blood.
- For the black Jaundice.
- For a Canker in a womans Pap.
- A Confection of Honey and Violets.
- A Confection of Sugar and Vinegar Simplex.
- The Nature of Comphry.
- To make Damask water.
- A very Excellent Medicine against Deafness.
- A Water to dissolve swelling in the bowells, and super∣fluity of fatt.
- Sounding or Tinkling in a Mans Eare.
- For watering of Eyes.
- For a stopping in the Eare.
- To provoke Flowers.
- To purge young gentle flowers.
- To make a Woman have her flowers.
- To stop the flowers.
- To stay the Flowers.
- A Julep of Roses.
- A Julep of Violetts.
- To break an Impostume in a Night and a Day.
- For the black Jaundise.
- An approved Medicine for the Yellow Jaundise.
- For the black Jaundise.
- To make hard leggs soft and smale, though it be never so hard.
- For young Children that have the Liver grown or the Wormes.
- To know whether a man shall live or dye.
- A red Plaister to drie.
- A Syrrup of Tart Pomgranats.
- To make Syrrup of Buglas.
- A Syrrup of Drye Roses.
- For the Shrinking of Sinewes.
- For swelling in the Armes or any other place.
- To stanch the bleeding of the Piles▪
- For a Woman travelling with Child to make her soon be delivered.
- To do away a Wenn, and not to cut him:
- For all manner of Wounds and Soares.
- The making of the said Plaister for Wounds or Soares.
- A Water of Pismires Eggs.
- A water of Birch-juice.
- For One that pisseth blood.
-
To make a singular Oyle for an Ach▪ proved by
Edward Kendall. - To make Cordiall Lozanges to break wind.
-
Probatum for the head-Ach. - For a woman to have her Flowers
- For a Woman that hath her flowers stopped.
- Another for the same.
- To cause a Woman to have her Flowers:
- To cause a Woman to have her Flowers. A Medicine that never failed, but beware that shee be not with Child.
- Another of the same.
- For a Woman delivered with Child.
- For to make speedy after throws.
- Another for the same.
- Another for the same.
- Another for the same.
- For the white Termes or Nature.
- For a Woman that hath her belly swelled with her Terms.
- For a burned Yard.
-
Probatum for the Tooth-ach. - An approved Medicine for him that cannot make his Water.
- To take away the hardness in a womans Milk, and to cause her milk to run.
- To drye up a womas Milk.
- For him that cannot hold his water.
- A plaister for the same.
- Another for the same.
- A Medicine for the after throws when a Woman is de∣livered of a Child.
- A drink for her also.
- A Medicine for a woman that have a cold stomach before or after Child bedd.
- For a scald-head whatsoever kind it be.
- To make a woman conceive.
- To make a man have lust to a Woman:
- To know if a man shall live or dye.
- A Drink for an Ague.
- A Powder for an Ague.
- To make washing Balls.
- An excellent Medicine for the Collick.
- For the Pin and Web in the Eye.
- To make water for soar Eyes.
- To make ones face fair.
- To clear the Skin.
- To make Hair grow if it be long a coming out.
- Oyle of Wormwood.
- Oyle of Worms.
- A perfume for Gloves.
- For the Pin and the Web.
- To make one to sleep.
- For the Tooth-ach
- A good water to make one well coloured.
- The properties and operation of Rose-water.
- For watering Eyes.
- For a womans quick deliverance.
- To make a Tooth fall out.
- For a Tettar.
- To take Fish.
- Against spitting of blood coming from the Lungs or Lights.
- To cure a Vain broken in the stomach and breast.
- For the wind in the Stomach.
-
An experienced Medicine for the Stone, Mr.
Henry Pelham - A water for the Stomach, poysons, small Pox, or any Sur∣fet, or falling, or Convulsion Fits.
-
For a blood-shotten bruise over the Eye, by Mrs.
Con∣way approved. - For the deafness in the Eares.
-
A Plaister for the Sciatica, approved by Mrs.
Church. - To cure any Pain or Knob arising in the hand, or other part.
-
A Syrrop for a Cold by my Lady
Cook the younger. - To make the Oyle of Adders-tongue.
-
For soar Eyes, by Sir
Francis Swift. - For the Cramp in Foot or Leg, or any other place.
- To take away a stopping Cold from the heart.
- For a Gaul with riding.
- Another for the same.
-
An Excellent Medicine for the Eyes by Sir
Kenelme Digby. - For an Ague.
- To make a Liquid Caustick.
- An excellent Vulnerary Drink for many Imperfections and Diseases.
- To make a water for the Eyes:
- To make the Tobacco Salve.
- For the Head-ach.
- For a Fellon or hot Swelling.
- For the Rickets.
- For a Canker although it be never so far gone.
- To make Bully's Oyle.
- To make the Sear-cloath to the Oyle.
- For an Impostume in the Breast or Sto∣mach.
- To open the Liver, Spleen and avoid Choler, and help the Tertian Ague.
- For the Meagrim.
-
For a Soar Breast, by Mr.
Cockman. - The Plaister.
- To keep Milk from curdling.
- If there shall be knots in either Breast or Swelling.
- But if with taking cold, inflammation should happen with any redness.
- Admit the worst should happen, and that by accident Im∣postumation should be caused and grief grow so as it must be broken.
- Against the biting of a mad Dog:
- A present remedy for the Bloody Flux.
- For the Piles.
- An excellent Glister.
- A speciall Medicine for a Tetter.
- For the Scaitica or paine in the Joints.
- A Receipt for the Green sickness.
- A Purge.
- An Excellent Julip to be taken in a Feaver▪
- For an Ague:
- For a Cold.
- A gentle Purge.
- For the inflammation of a Wound.
- An excellent Sear-cloth for an Ach in the Back, Side, or any limbe of the Body.
- An Electuary of Sarsafras.
- For the Splene.
- The Oyntment.
- A Pouder to eat for the Splene.
- An excellent Ptysan drink for the shortness of breath.
- For the yellow Jandise.
- To draw out a Thorne.
- A Syrrup for a Cough.
- For a Straine.
- A Dyet Drink.
- This Drink is for old wounds, green wounds, Bruises, or Aches, or other diseases arising from these things a∣foresaid, and hath, and will cure the Cancer.
- To break the Stone in the Kidneys:
- A Lute.
- To make Sirrup of Gilly flowers.
- To make Conserve of Roses.
- To Distill Roses.
- A Pill to purge the head.
- An approved Medicine to cleare the Reines of gravell or the stone, and also to clense them from all slimy matter which cause the Gonorra or Defluxion of seed.
- For the Gout and all Aches.
- For the Splene.
- For the Jaundise.
- For a looseness and Flux.
- Another for the same.
- For the Mother and wind of the Stomach.
- For a lameness in the Limbs, Leggs, or elsewhere occa∣sioned by Cold.
- For fleame in the Stomack and a Cough.
- For a weakness in the Back or a Gonorrhaea, or Running of the Reines.
- For a Foot pained and swollen with the Gout, the humors falling down thereto.
- An Astringent Medicine for the Reines.
-
For a Cleanser and a strengthener,
ad idem. - For a Liver that is rotten as a Sheep.
- Fluxing Pills.
- Against the superfluity of the Menstralls.
- For the bloody Flux.
- For any of the three kinds of Dropsey.
- For a Bnrning or Scald.
- Against paine, and Ach in the Joynts.
- For the Flux.
- For the Hemorrhoides.
- For the sweatings caused by a Hectick feaver or other wise.
- For a paine in the head caused through cold.
- For the Gonorrhaea. Mr. Mosse.
- Tum.
- For a Plaister to the Back:
- For a Palsey.
- To discuss a hard tumor on the breast, &c.
- For a Scald head.
- For Pimples in the face caused by little wormes, &c. Master Mosse.
- For the Convulsion fitts, an excellent and never fai∣ling Medicine.
- Doctor Butlers Receipt for the hearing.
- To stanch the bleeding at the Nose.
- For the wind Collick.
- For the Piles.
-
For the Hemorrhodes Dector
Listers prescript ion for Mr.Gestick. - For the same.
- A Glister for the same.
-
For the Hemorrhoids from Doctor
Maurice Williams. -
For the Hemorrhoides Doctor
Lysters prescription. - For a Pinn and Web.
- A Receit for your Stomach when it is watrish, or when you cannot disgest your meat well.
- For the Stone.
- For a Consumption.
-
The Receipt of the Lady
Savills water to wash her face with, sent for out ofItaly. -
For the Rickets, an approved Medicine, Mrs.
Dim∣mock. -
For to purge the Body,
ad idem. - For a Consumption.
- For the running of the Reins.
- For the Stone, and to provoke Ʋrine.
- For the Piles.
- For an Ache.
- To help a Woman in Labour.
- For the Fits of the Mother.
- For weakness.
- For a soar mouth or throat.
- The expression of Rheubarb.
- An Oyle.
- To preserve green Plumms.
- An Electuary.
- The preparation of the Magistrall Sena.
-
Aquapendente his Pill, as it was delivered me by his A∣pothecary inItaly. -
To cure a Consumption and all Ʋlcers, even inward: It purifieth the blood, and cureth
Morbus Gal. &c. - For to cool the Liver.
- A Cordiall against the Consumption.
- A Powder for a Fistula.
- To make the water.
- For sharpness of Ʋrine.
- A powder for Worms:
- To make Basilicon.
- Lynementum Arcei.
- Diapomfoligos.
- Ʋn. desecat Rubrum.
- How to make a Cordiall Electuary for a stuffing or short∣ness of breath.
- For a Feaver.
- For the Eyes.
- To make a water for the Stone.
- For a Plaister.
- For the Glister.
- For the cold flegm and stone and pain in the back.
- For a Cough.
- A most precious and approved Balsom for any old Soar, or green Wound.
- A present Remedy for the bloody Flux.
- For the Dropsye.
- The Purge that must be taken with it.
- To prevent Abortion.
- The making of Aloway pills.
- To restore Nature.
-
For a sore Cough, by the Lady
Sussex. - A Dyet Drink against the Kings Evill, or for any other that will take Physick, if a child have any bunches or Kirnels about them.
- An Excellent purge.
- Excellent purging Pills.
- A medicine for the falling sickness.
- To cure the French Pox.
- The Dyet drink.
- The Diapalma Plaister.
- To make the green Oyntment;
- The Effect.
- To make syrrop of Quinces excellent good for the sto∣mach to be taken at any time.
- For the Plague.
- Against the noise in the head which hindereth the hearing.
-
Doctor
Burges directions against the Plague. - For a Flux.
- An Electuary.
- For the strengthening of your Liver, and to take away the malignant peccant sharp humor.
- For your Dyet.
- In any difficulty of Ʋrine.
- A Medicine for the Falling sickness.
- A Potion to heale all inflamations in the throat, Tongue, or Gummes.
- To make Tobacco Water.
- For sharpness of Ʋryne.
- To make one leane.
- A receipt for to make Lozenges.
- For Piles,
- For the Piles.
- For the Piles to stench blood.
-
Mrs.
W. China Broth for a Consumption. -
The Lady
F. Receipt for the same. - Another for the same.
- For a Squinancie or soare throat.
- For the falling Evill.
-
The making of
Ung. Nutritum orTriapharmacon. -
For an Ʋlcer on the Topp or foreskinne of the
Penis. - For bleeding at the Nose.
- Another proved.
- Another approved.
-
A good Medicine for the Stone, approved by Mrs.
Cranmor. -
This is to be stild in
July to serve all the yeare, two stillfulls will serve all the yeare. - For the biting of a madd Dogg for either a man or beasts.
- The wound-drink to be made in the midst of MAY.
- The Vertues.
- A Purge.
- For the heat fo the face.
- For Deafeness.
- For the Spleen.
- A very good Purge.
- For a Consumption.
- A Balsom.
- To stanch Bleeding.
- A Poultis.
- A Dyet to dry up humours.
- Pills for the Spring.
- Pills for the Autumne.
- The most approved Pills for the Palsey.
- Pills for the Gonorraeha.
- Pills for a Purge.
- Pills for the Head.
- Pills to purge.
- Excellent Pills for the Stomach.
- An Aqua Composita.
-
There be foure dayes that Saint
Bede the great Clerk telleth of. - A good rule for blod letting and proved trew.
- The three Mondaies.
- To stanch Bleeding.
- To stanch blood of Veine or wound.
- Another to stanch bleeding of a wound.
- Divers good Medicines to stanch the bleeding of a wound.
- Another for the same.
- Another to stanch the bleeding at the Nose or of a wound.
- To know whether a man shall dye or not that hath a bloo∣dy Flux.
- Another.
- To know whether the fault be in the man or woman when they have no Children.
- For the Kings Evill.
- To wash the Morphew.
- To take a Corn out of the Toe.
- To know when to gather all sorts of Simples in their se∣verall seasons.
- A very good Medicine for a soar Breast.
- For swelling in the Cods of man or beast.
- Signa Morientis.
- Let not blood any of these daies following.
- For all manner of Aches called Bullys Oyle.
-
For the Mother by Doctor
Butler. -
For a Fistula, Cankar, or other old Soar, which healed the old festered Fistula in the brest of Mr▪
Tho. Wood Curate ofNewington in his dayes, - For Teeth that are yellow and foule.
- For the Dropsie.
-
Approved on Mr.
Edward Lacking the Minister ofLimsfield inSurry by the LadyCapell. 1646. - For the Stone.
- For the running of the Reins.
- A very good Balsome for Ʋlcers or soars either in Man or Beast.
- To make a Poultice to heale any old soare or running Ʋlcer Approved.
- To make Mel rosarum.
- A gentle Purge for a quartaine Ague to be taken a day before the fit.
- A Broth for a Feaver.
-
A very good Sear-cloth by Mr.
Hendly. - The Lime water for old soares.
-
An approved
Aqua Composita for a Surfet, or a cold stomach. - To make Wormewood water.
-
To make Mint water, by Mr.
News. - A Plaister for a broken shin, and to heale it.
- For the trembling of the hands.
- The black Searcloath.
- A Medicine for any Inflammation in any part of the body.
- A Medicine for a Cows bagg that is hard.
- A precious Balsom.
- To make Salve water, which is an excellent remedy for all soare throats, and mouths, and for ulcerated Lungs if the party drink often of it. It is also for old soares, and green wounds.
- For the Tooth Ach.
- Oyle of Aparicio for any green wound or Gun-shot.
- How to dress the wound.
- For the redness in the Face or Nose.
- For the Frenzy and madness in the head.
- To make a Suppository to work effectually.
- Another.
- An approved Medicine for a soar Breast.
-
An approved Medicine for soar Eyes by Mrs.
Fermin∣ham: - An Oyle for a bruise in the Eye, or for any other bruise, by me approved.
- A very good Purge.
- A Medicine for an Ague often tryed and seldom failed.
- A Medicine for the Wormes.
- A Common Glister.
- A Glister to coole, and refrigerate.
-
A Glister by Mr.
Warth. -
Another by Doctor
Ward. - For the Green sickness.
- Another Medicine for the green Sickness.
- A Dyet drink to help the Green Sickness.
- A Pouder for the same.
- A Drink for the same:
-
An Approved purgation for a quartane Ague by
W. Hampton. -
For a quartane Ague by Mrs.
Purvey. - To stay the flux of ten years Continuance.
- The Implaister called Paracelsus, good for a Bruise or old soare.
- A Medicine for the Falling sickness.
- For the Piles.
- A Plaister for a bruise, be the same inward or outward, or both.
- A Medicine to kill a Canker in the Throat or Nose, which must be applyed to the outside of the Throat or Nose, you must lay it to morning and Evening, twice or thrice dressing will kill it.
- For burning and scalding, to take out the fire, and to heal, and skin it.
- Another.
- A Dyet drink for to purge most Diseases.
- A Dyet drink for many imperfections.
- A Dyet Ale to purge most Diseases.
- A Dyet drink to take Spring, and fall, and if need bee at other times.
- A gentle Purgation.
- Another.
- A Purgation against Melancholly.
- To make Balme Water.
- Another Purgation.
- Another.
- Another.
-
Hereafter followeth certain most appro∣ved and precious Receipts, set down by the learned and expert Physi∣tian Doctor
Martin a Kurnebeck. - A Dyet drink to purge easily.
- The Electuary for a weake stomach to comfort the same, and for the swelling of the Liver:
- The Decoction for the obstruction of the Liver to open the same.
- An Oyntment for the Stomach and Liver.
- An Oyntment for the Splene being wind-swollen, turning too and fro, making you sick, short winded, and the sto∣mach to rise as it were to vomit, it is most effectuall, qualifyiug the sharp humour of the Melancholy, it is also of a good savor and smell, and of great effect.
-
An Electuary for the stone by Doctor
Martins Counsell. -
The description of the Eight Papers of pouder for the Stone by Doctor
Martin's Counsell. - A Receipt of the little pouder to purge Choller Flegme and Itch.
- Lozenges to destroy wind in the Stomach and the Choli∣ca passio, provoking water, also two three or foure to be eaten when the paine cometh.
-
The Plaister, or rather Searcloath called
Oxicrotium, is greatly commodious for such as have broken Ribs; or have set shoulders, Ancles, or other Limbs being out of their Joynts, to knit or to strengthen the place again, Sinews, Ligaments, Strings, and Nerves, as I have had the experience of it in breaking three of my Ribs on the left side, and others also. - A Decoction for the Stone with the Receipt for the whea∣zing of the Pipes.
- The powder following is of the same Author to break the Stone, and to expell the same.
- The Electuary for the Breast and Lungs, and for dissol∣ving the cold and hard flegme.
- Here followeth the Receipt of the Coun∣tess Oyntment.
- These are the Pessaries:
- These Lozenges following are also for that purpose to be eaten at any time.
- The Costlie Oyntment for the Spleen, being hard swolne and loaden with melancholy.
- These are the Herbs, Roots, and Seeds for the Bags and Fomentation for that purpose.
- A Decoction for the Stone with a Receipt for the whezing in the breast.
-
Dr.
Martyns Powder for the stone. -
Dr.
Martyns Electuary for the Breast and Lungs. -
The Syrrop for that purpose of Dr.
Martyns prescription. - The Oyntment for the back.
- The Oyntment for the Spleen.
-
A Paste or Marmalade to dissolve the flegm in the Sto∣mach for Mrs.
Dyx, by Mr.Martyns counsell. -
A Dredge for the Flegm and Stomack by Doctor
Martin. - Cakes of Licorice to lay under ones Tongue to stay the tickling Cough.
- The common making of Juyce of Licorice.
- The Decoctions of the five opening roots purging Flegm.
- The purgation to use after the former Doctor.
- The Electuary or a Paste, or Marmalade for the Stone in the Reines to break the same.
-
The pouder called
Liton tripon. - A Cearcloth for the inflammation of the Reins, and the knitting of the rawness of the back.
- An Oyntment for the Reyns in the paine of the Stone.
- The Oyntment to coole the Reyns.
-
Doctor
Martins Order how to take his Decoction. - This pouder following may be taken one dram at once as they are divided in eight papers, once in a fort∣night or a Month, as necessity shall require in white Wine, Beer or Ale, not regarding the New, Full or Quarter of the Moon. It will scoure the Reins, gravell and stones, and open the Liver and the splene, and emptie the guts and Stomach.
-
Doctor
Martins Receipts of the five opening roots for Mr.Dyx. -
For a Vomit by Doctor
Martin. -
Lozenges by Doctor
Martins Counsell for the Rawness and windiness of the Stomach for Mr.Dix. -
Doctor
Martins most notable Syrup to break the Stone which was had of DoctorHatcher ofCambridge, for diminishing, breaking, and expelling the stone, as well in the Reins as in the Bladder, as also for purging and scowring the little gravell, you must take two ounces of this Syrup with three ounces of Saxifrage water for one draught twelve dayes together. - A purgation to be drunk called Electuarium Indivium, the lesser whereof you may drink six drams with the de∣coction of Saxifrage, Pellitory of the wall, and Parsley, with a spoon full of Anniseeds, boyled in Ale or Beer, take ten spoonfuls of the decoction, and dissolve the Ele∣ctuary therein luke warme, and so drink it upon a good day.
- The Oyntment for your back more cooling, and to drive the stone which was red in colour.
- A Soveraigne Electuary for the Plague.
-
Doctor
Martin his Letter touching the Palsey. - The sharp Glister for the Palsie.
-
The Hippocras for the Palsey by Doctor
Martin. - The Oyntment for the Palsie.
- The Bath or fomentation.
- The Ceare-cloth for the Palsey.
- The Sirupps.
- The pills for the Purgation.
- The Oyntment to annoynt his head after the shaving thereof.
- The distilled water that is to be used for the rubbing of his Temples and Lips, and also to drink as before is set down.
- The Gargarisme as followeth.
- The Pomander.
- Also it is convenient to use a pouder to draw up at the No∣strills to procure sneesing, which followeth.
- Also it is needfull for faintness of the heart, or sencelesness in the head to use these Lozenges following.
- Now followeth for the falling of the Evula to the root of the Tongue which hindreth the speech and swallowing, this cometh of cold contained in the head, and from thence falling down maketh all these Impediments and hoarsness also.
- The Gargarisme for the Squinancy.
- The Lineament for the Squinancy.
- The Poultice or Cataplasma for the Squinancy.
-
Dr.
Martyns Electuary against the Plague.
-
Certain speciall Medicines for the Stone, the Chollick, and for the stopping of the Urine either by Stone or Strangury: For pain in the Throat, the Rheume, the Stitch, &c. approved and sent un∣to me by my Cosin
Standish as follow∣eth.- For the Stone.
- Another for the Stone.
- Another.
-
Dr.
Smiths Medicine for the stopping of the Ʋrine, and to asswage the extream heat therof. - For the stopping of the Ʋrine either by the Stone or Stran∣gury.
- For one that maketh blood-water before it come to the extream pain of the Strangury.
- A Medicine for the swelling in the throat.
- Another for the throat.
- For a windy Stomach.
- For the wind▪Chollick:
- Another for the same.
- A Drink for the Lungs.
- To stay the tickling of the Rheume in the night.
- For the Stitch.
- Another.
- To make the black Water to kill the Itch of a Wound new healed, or about a Wound; or any Itch elsewhere.
- For a Ringworm or Tettar, or red Pimples in the face.
- To cleanse Corruption out of a Wound, and to make good flesh grow in the place.
- To make Jelly of Harts horn:
- A Vomit to cleanse the stomach.
- To stay a Vomit.
- The Receipt of the Wound-drink.
- For the Stone.
- For a soar Throat.
- Flos Ʋnguentorum.
- For the Morphew, white, or black, if it be curable.
- For a Scald or a Burne.
-
A Receipt for the
Sciatica, or other paine in the Bones. - To stay the Humor.
- A Medicine to kill a Ringworme.
- An easie Plaster for the Gout.
- To make Gelly of Harts-horne.
- A Receipt for the Stone.
- For such as cannot make water.
-
Doctor
Fryer his Receipt which he used in the time of the Infection of the Plague, and all other contagious sickness. - A Drink for a Surfet in the stomach.
-
Doctor
Monfords Cordiall water, - To make Cynamon water.
- Pills to purge the Head and Stomach.
- An excellent plaister for the Back.
- A Medicine to keep up the pallate of the mouth.
- To dry up the rheume in the head.
-
For Mrs.
Dyx. - Scabious.
- The China Broath.
- To draw out Infection.
- For the biting of a mad Dogge, for Man, or Beast.
- To make Popylion.
- To make Oyle of Exeter Bawme.
- For to help a man or woman that is bursten in the space of seven daies, and never cut him, and if he be an angry man nine daies at the most.
- For a Fistula.
- For the pain in the back.
- A Medicine for the Cough.
- To make a Poultice.
- A Receipt for the stopping of the Ʋrine.
- For an Oyntment.
- An approved pouder for the Stone.
- For them that make bloody Ʋrine.
- A Receipt to make Black salve.
- A Medicine to cure any Whitlaw.
- A water to cure any ould Ʋlcer.
- To stop the bleeding at the Nose.
- For the Emerodes.
- To make a water for the stone.
- To make Jelly of a Cock.
- The black Salve.
-
A Soveraign and approved Medicine for the S
yatica. - For a Mad Dogge.
- Another.
- A Purge.
- For the heat of the face.
- For deafnesse.
- For the Splene.
- A very good Purge.
- For a Consumption.
- A Balsom.
- A Poultice.
- A Diet Drink to drie up humors.
- Corne being black to recover the colour.
- To keep Wheat after it is cleane.
-
A true Receipt of Mr.
Gaskins Cordiall pouder, with directions how to use it. - For bleeding at the Nose.
- Another approved.
- Another approved.
- For the Stomach grief.
-
A good Medicine for the stone approved by Mrs.
Cranmer. - For the biting of a madd Dogg, for either Man or Beasts.
-
The wound drink to be made in the midst of
May. - The Virtues.
- A Poultice to asswage pain, and to ripen a Soar.
- A Digestive to heal a bite where it is broken and runs.
-
To make a Powder of
Paracelsus. - A Medicine to cleanse the Gumms.
- For a Perl in the Eye.
- To make Oyle of Ipericon.
- The Virtues.
- To make oyle of Roses, Violets, or of any Herb or Flower.
- Oyle of Swallows.
-
To make
Oleum Benedictum, or the Blessed Oyle. - The virtue of this Oyle.
- To make Oyle of Earthworms.
- The virtue of the Oyle of Dill.
- The virtue of the Oyle of Rew.
- Oyle of Elder-flowers.
- Oyle of Leaves, and Flowers of Camomile.
- The virtue of Oyle of sweet Mints.
- Oyle of Wormwood.
- Oyle of Roses, and Rose-buds.
- Oyle of Violet flowers.
- Oyle of water Lilly-flowers.
-
A Medicine for the T
sick, stopping of, or in the Breast; and to open the Pipes. - For Warts.
- A Drink which is marvellous in working, and much commended of all Surgeons for a Fistula in the body, and it will cast out broken bones.
- A drink of such force, as being given to the wounded or diseased with the Fistula, it wipeth out all filthiness in them, and healeth the Wound or Fistula,
- A powder for a Fistula.
- The use of it.
- The first Dyet-drink to cure the Fistula, and many other griefs.
- The second Dyet-drink to cure the Fistula, and divers other Imperfections.
- A white water to cure the Fistula, and many other Soars.
- Another to cure the Fistula, Tetter, Pegus, and Scald.
- To make Pills approved good for the Chollick.
- The making of Oximel to make up the Pills.
- How to make the Pills aforesaid to work upon every humour as need shall require.
- Syrrup of Bysons good for all stoppings and stitches com∣ing of Feavers, and for the yellow Jaundice, and for Feavers coming of Choller and Flegm.
- Syrrup of Roses to allay thirst in a burning Ague, to com∣fort the stomach, and to let corruptions from ingendring.
- Syrrup of Violets good for the Diseases aforesaid, as also for the dry Cough, and Rheume in the throat, the stich in the side, and comforteth the Liver and Heart.
- A Syrrup to comfort the stomach.
- To make syrrup of red Roses.
-
A Pill to expell the Chollick, and to preserve the Li∣ver. by Mrs:
Napper. -
An excellent Medicine for the Stone by
William Hamp∣ton. -
Another for the same by Dr.
Nicholas. -
To make the Syrrup
de quinque Radicibus. - A Syrrup to cool Choller.
- To avoid Choller and Flegm.
- For the yellow Jaundice.
- A syrrup for the Lungs.
-
For the weakness in the back by
William Hamp∣ton. - To cool an extream heat in the Liver.
- A Syrrup for the Liver.
- For the stopping of the Liver.
- A cold water for the Liver.
- For heat of the Liver.
-
For the biting of a Madd-Dogg, by Dr.
Nicholas, and Dr.Wood. -
A Medicine for the Plurisie when one is in extremity, by the Lady
Fortescue. -
To know when one feeleth a stitch whether it be wind or
Plurisie, Dr. July. - A Receipt for the Plurisie.
- An excellent Medicine for the Plurisy.
- A Pouder to preserve from, and to cure the Plague.
- For those that be well.
- For a Child.
- An approved Medicine to preserve from the Plague.
- A generall Medicine for all sorts of people taken with the Plague, to be had without cost.
- If a Soare do appeare.
- To preserve some, and to expell the Plague.
- To make of a Pill to purge grosse flegme, and to bring down the redds.
- Pills to purge the head and Stomach.
- To procure a stomach.
- To comfort the weakness of the Stomach, and also the Head.
- For the wind in the Stomach.
- A very good Plaister for the Stomach.
- For a hot Stomach.
- From an Ach in the Stomack.
- For the same.
- For weak abhorring stomacks.
- For the same.
-
A Plaister for the Splene by Doctor
Hill.
- To know the Characters whereby the Physitians Note and set down in their Receipts the quantity and measure of Hearbs, &c. as followeth.
-
Chymicall Extractions.
- Aurum Potabile.
- Another way.
- The quintessence of Quick-silver.
- The quintessence of Brimstone.
- A burning peircing Water.
- The quintessence of Antimony.
- The white water or Maids milk of Mercury or Quick-silver.
- To make a diphoretick of Antimony and Sol that work∣eth in dose, foure, five, six, or seven graines.
-
To make the Diaphorettick of Antimony, Mercury, Sr.
Walter Rawleighs way. - To make the Purge of Tartar, what quantity you will, two pound or more.
- Chymicall Characters.
- Luting.
- To draw Chymicall Oyles by the Lymbeck.
- For a Cancer, a Tettar, a Wart, or a great bunch on the face.
- For a Fistula.
- For a Burn.
- To sweeten Amber.
- A Laudanum.
-
A Purge of Antimony that works without Vomit, by Dr.
Jordain. - A Recept to make Vinegar.
- A Receipt to make Raison Wine.
- To draw Oyle of Tartar and Turpentine.
-
Certaine Secrets of Hearbs not Com∣monly to be found in any common HERBALL.
- Tutsan, or Parke Leaves.
- This Hearb is good against the stopping of the Liver and Milt, a Plaister made hereof is good against head ach, that is engendred of evill humors.
- Mugwort.
- Sothernwood.
- Allelnia. Subwort.
- Egrimony.
- Caroway.
- Coleworts.
- Woodbind.
- Onyons.
- Columbine.
- Cardiaca.
- Wolfe Thistle or wilde Thistle.
- Comfrye.
- A Note for the removing and making of slips and planting of Artichokes, Gooseberries, Roses, Privet, White∣thornes, and all manner of flowers.
- A Note of the best times of sowing these Hearbs and seeds insuing.
- part
- Rules for the setting of Hearbs and sowing of seeds. The setting of Hearbs.
- In February.
- In March.
- In June.
- In August.
- The sowing of Seeds.
- In March.
- In Aprill.
- In May in the end.
- After Pentecost.
- In August.
- Setting of Hearbs and sowing of Seeds.
- March.
- Aprill.
- May.
- The Vertues of divers Waters, as followeth.
-
To Distill Waters truely. Out of Mrs.
Dauson hir Book.- Prymeroses.
- Fennell.
- Isop.
- Camomile.
- VValwort.
- Strawburies.
- VVormewood.
- Selendine.
- To distill Damask water.
- To make sweet water with a small cost.
-
Sweet Waters which I had out of Mrs.
Dawson her Book. -
My Lady
Cromwell. -
My Lady
Paget. - To make Damask water in Winter.
-
How to make another Damask water proved, by her that stilleth the Kings sweet Waters at
Hampton-Court. - To make Rosewater for Damask-water.
- To make Damask water at all times.
- To make water Aromatick.
- To make a peircing water:
- A sharp water to cleanse Metall:
-
Baits for
Fishes. -
To Dye divers kinds of
Colours. -
To make Network called the Broad Arrow, and the Diamond.
- To make Net-work of the Skallop-shell.
- The Knotwork like Dice.
- To make Network like seven Eyes.
- The Net-worke of the small Diamonds.
- To make the great Loosings.
- Loosings of eight stitches.
- To knit Net-work like Glass-windows:
- How to knit Net-work of the Harts.
- The Knotted work of the Flese.
- A K not-work like Honey-combs.
- The Knot-work of Lossinges:
- The order how to knit a Hose.
-
Here beginneth the making of Laces.
- A broad Lace of V. bows.
- A Lace round of V. bow.
- An open Lace of V. bows.
- The same Lace of divers colours.
- A Lace bastuve of five Bows.
- A broad Lace for Purses of ten bowes.
- A Lace bordered.
- A Lace covert of ten bowes.
- A Lace double covert.
- A Lace cowpen covert.
- An other Lace of coupen covert depiole.
- A Launce daunce broad of twelve bowes.
- The same round.
- A Lace piole.
- A Lace covert cheveron.
- A lace depowne.
- A lace of covert Viceray.
- The same lace compounds.
- A Lace Demi-cheveron.
- The same Compound.
- A Lace covert de bastuve.
- A Lace covert de bastuve de-miray.
- A Lace Bastuve techell.
- A broad lace for Pnrses of seven bowes.
- The same Lace open.
- A Lace partie round.
- The same Compound.
- A lace partie broad.
- The same lace ray.
- A lace called pale.
- A lace quarter and quar▪tell.
- The same compound.
- A lace corduve of eight bowes.
- A lace Maskell.
- A lace called the fret.
- A lace called Cow-de-rate.
- The same Lace.
- The same Lace compound.
- The same Lace of sixteen bowes.
- A Lace bend.
- The same Lace of sixteen bowes.
- A Lace cheveron broad.
- A Lace cheveron round.
- A Lace penne de pound.
- A Lace en leved of sixteen bowes.
- A lace cheveron broad of eight bowes.
- A lace Cheveron round.
- A lace ownd of sixteen bowes.
- A lace ownd round.
- A lace sawter of eight bowes.
- A Lace Croisle.
- A Lace Croise Ʋliet.
- A Lace double losenge.
- A Lace double croisle.
- A Lace uliet boss.
- A Lace uliet vine.
- A Lace Ʋliet boss.
- A Lace Sawter Ʋliet.
- The same Lace round▪
- A Lace fret Ʋliet round.
- The same Lace fret and broad.
- A Lace cressant.
- A Lace indented.
- A Lace green de orgee.
- The same double with twelve bowes.
- A Lace vice of three colours.
- A Lace that is called Vinee.
- A Lace cheveron broad of sixteen bowes.
- The same Lace Compound.
-
An Order how to breed Horses.
- The choice of your Stallion and Studd Mares.
- Wild Mares be not best to keep for the Race.
- At what age your Mare is first to be handled and covered.
- How to inforce your Mares to come to be strained.
- The Order of covering.
- How to use your Mare whic his covered.
- How to make that no Mare shall go barren.
- What time of the yeare is best for your Mares to be covered.
- To Dyet your Stand for the time he shall cover.
- How your breeding Mare is to be used when she shall Foale.
- How many years a horse will serve to cover your Mares.
- The best age for horse or Mares to get or beare Colts, and how many years they will continue good.
- What time of the yeare is best to wean the Colts from their Dams.
- What feeding is best for Colts, from two years old upward.
- Why Englishhorses be taken up so young, are not good.
- The way to handle a sturdy Horse.
- The using of horse after they be handled.
- What feeding is best in Winter for Mares, Weanlings, and two years old.
- part
- At what age Colts may best be handled.
-
To make a Lenton Gelly.
- To make a Lenton Custard.
- To dry Damsons, or any other Plumms.
-
To preserve red Roses whole after Mrs.
Goodrouse manner which hee calleth Conserve of red Roses whole. - To preserve the Walnut in syrrup.
- To candy Eringus.
- To preserve the Pippin, Pear, or Warden dry, as fol∣loweth.
- To preserve Quinces.
- To make Syrrup of Mallows.
- The making of the Syrrup of the five opening Roots.
- To make Syrrup of Apples after the Prescription of the foresaid Doctors.
-
The Receipt of the Broath for the Stone, by Do ctor
Matthias. - To make Orange Cakes.
- To make Bisket bread.
- To make Almond Butter.
- To bake beefe like red Deer to be eaten cold.
- To marinate Fish.
- Angell water.
- One dozen of the little Cloathes.
- A Custard.
- To brew Ale.
- To make Mustard.
- A Receipt to prepare the Suet.
- part
- To make an Olave Pye.
- To make a French Pye.
- To make Puffs.
- To beautifie and adorn the Face.
- Adidem.
- part
- A Perfume.
- part
- Another Perfume:
- Another.
- Certain very good Perfumes.
-
Perfumes
for Gloves.- To perfume Gloves.
- To perfume Gloves very well.
- Another perfume for Gloves.
- Another Perfume for Gloves.
- The Receipt for the former Perfume.
- Another Receipt for the same.
- To make an excellent Pomander.
- To make a costly Pomander or counterfeit Amber.
- To make a good Pomander.
- To make a Pomander of light cost.
- A sweet pouder to be sown in silk bagges.
- Another.
- Another.
- A Pouder to make sweet bags.
- For to make sweet Baggs:
- To make a sweet Bagge.
- To make sweet Pouders.
-
An Exact ALPHABETICAL INDEX Of all the PHYSICAL RECEIPTS In this BOOK. - Rare Secrets of Herbs, not to be found in any common HERBAL, with their Vertues and Natures.
- Excellent wayes to distil Waters from Flow∣ers, Herbs, Roots, &c.
- A TABLE of sundry Rare Inven∣tions contained in this Book.